TY - JOUR AU - Hancock M. AU - Stafford R. AU - McAuley J. AU - Stanton T. AU - Hodges P. AU - Macedo L. AU - Kamper S. AU - Maher C. AB -

BACKGROUND: Current treatments for low back pain have small effects. A research priority is to identify patient characteristics associated with larger effects for specific interventions. OBJECTIVE: To identify simple clinical characteristics of patients with chronic low back pain who would benefit more from either motor control exercises or graded activity. DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial. SETTING: Australian physiotherapy clinics. PARTICIPANTS: 172 patients presenting with chronic low back pain were enrolled in the trial. INTERVENTIONS: The treatment consisted of 12 initial exercise sessions over an 8-week period and booster sessions at 4 and 10 months following randomization. MEASUREMENTS: The putative effect modifiers (psychosocial features, physical activity level, walking tolerance and self-reported signs of clinical instability) were measured at baseline. Measures of pain and function (both measured on a 0-10 scale) were taken at baseline, 2, 6 and 12 months by a blinded assessor. RESULTS: We found self-reported clinical instability was a statistically significant and clinically important modifier of treatment response for 12 month function (interaction: 2.72; 95% CI 1.39 to 4.06). People with high scores on the clinical instability questionnaire (>/=9) did 0.85 points better with motor control whereas people who had low scores (<9) did 1.93 points better with graded activity. Most other effect modifiers investigated did not appear to be useful in identifying preferential response to exercise type. LIMITATIONS: The psychometric properties of the instability questionnaire have not been fully tested. CONCLUSION: A simple 15-item questionnaire of features considered indicative of clinical instability can identify patients who respond best to either motor control exercise or graded activity.

AD - L.G. Macedo, PT, PhD, Physical Therapy, University of Alberta, 2-50 Corbett Hall, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2G4, Canada.
C.G. Maher, PT, PhD, Musculoskeletal Division, The George Institute for Global Health, 2000, New South Wales, Australia.
M. Hancock, PT, PhD, Discipline of Physiotherapy, Faculty of Human Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
S.J. Kamper, PT, PhD, EMGO+ Institute, VU University Medical Centre, Amsterdam, the Netherlands, and Musculoskeletal Division, The George Institute for Global Health.
J. McAuley, PhD, Neuroscience Research Australia, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
T.R. Stanton, PT, PhD, City East Campus, Division of Health Sciences, The University of South Australia, Adelaide, South Australia.
R. Stafford, PhD, Physiotherapy, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
P.W. Hodges, PT, PhD, Physiotherapy, The University of Queensland, and School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. AN - 25013000 BT - Physical Therapy DP - NLM ET - 2014/07/12 LA - Eng LB - MSK N1 - Macedo, Luciana Gazzi
Maher, Christopher G
Hancock, Mark
Kamper, Steve J
McAuley, James
Stanton, Tasha R
Stafford, Ryan
Hodges, Paul W
Phys Ther. 2014 Jul 10. N2 -

BACKGROUND: Current treatments for low back pain have small effects. A research priority is to identify patient characteristics associated with larger effects for specific interventions. OBJECTIVE: To identify simple clinical characteristics of patients with chronic low back pain who would benefit more from either motor control exercises or graded activity. DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial. SETTING: Australian physiotherapy clinics. PARTICIPANTS: 172 patients presenting with chronic low back pain were enrolled in the trial. INTERVENTIONS: The treatment consisted of 12 initial exercise sessions over an 8-week period and booster sessions at 4 and 10 months following randomization. MEASUREMENTS: The putative effect modifiers (psychosocial features, physical activity level, walking tolerance and self-reported signs of clinical instability) were measured at baseline. Measures of pain and function (both measured on a 0-10 scale) were taken at baseline, 2, 6 and 12 months by a blinded assessor. RESULTS: We found self-reported clinical instability was a statistically significant and clinically important modifier of treatment response for 12 month function (interaction: 2.72; 95% CI 1.39 to 4.06). People with high scores on the clinical instability questionnaire (>/=9) did 0.85 points better with motor control whereas people who had low scores (<9) did 1.93 points better with graded activity. Most other effect modifiers investigated did not appear to be useful in identifying preferential response to exercise type. LIMITATIONS: The psychometric properties of the instability questionnaire have not been fully tested. CONCLUSION: A simple 15-item questionnaire of features considered indicative of clinical instability can identify patients who respond best to either motor control exercise or graded activity.

PY - 2014 SN - 1538-6724 (Electronic)
0031-9023 (Linking) T2 - Physical Therapy TI - Predicting response to motor control exercises and graded activity for low back pain patients: preplanned secondary analysis of a randomised controlled trial ER -