Department of Bioengineering, Imperial College London, London, UK
Centre for Blast Injury Studies, Department of Bioengineering, Imperial College London, London, UK.
BMJ Open. 2023 Oct 16;13(10):e073062. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-073062.
Lower limb amputation results in reduced bone mineral density (BMD) on the amputated side. Exercise interventions have proven effective in improving BMD. However, such interventions have not been attempted in an amputee population. Exercises designed for people with intact limbs may not be suitable for amputees, due to joint loss and the mechanical interface between the exercise equipment and the femoral neck being mediated through a socket. Therefore, prior to intervention implementation, it would be prudent to leverage biomechanical knowledge and clinical expertise, alongside scientific evidence in related fields, to assist in intervention development. The objective of this study is to elicit expert opinion and gain consensus to define specific exercise prescription parameters to minimise/recover BMD loss in amputees.
The Delphi technique will be used to obtain consensus among international experts; this will be conducted remotely as an e-Delphi process. 10-15 experts from ≥2 continents and ≥5 countries will be identified through published research or clinical expertise. Round 1 will consist of participants being asked to rate their level of agreement with statements related to exercise prescription to improve amputee BMD using a 5-point Likert Scale. Agreement will be deemed as ≥3 on the Likert Scale. Open feedback will be allowed in round 1 and any statement which less than 50% of the experts agree with will be excluded. Round 2 will repeat the remaining statements with the addition of any input from round 1 feedback. Round 3 will allow participants to reflect on their round 2 responses considering statistical representation of group opinion and whether they wish to alter any of their responses accordingly. Statements reaching agreement rates of 70% or above among the experts will be deemed to reach a consensus and will be implemented in a future exercise interventional trial.
Ethical approval was received from Imperial College Research Ethics Committee (reference: 6463766). Delphi participants will be asked to provide digital informed consent. The findings will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications.
下肢截肢会导致截肢侧骨密度(BMD)降低。运动干预已被证明可有效提高 BMD。然而,此类干预措施尚未在截肢人群中尝试过。为完整肢体设计的运动可能不适合截肢者,因为关节丧失以及运动器材与股骨颈之间的机械接口是通过接受腔来介导的。因此,在实施干预之前,利用生物力学知识和临床专业知识,以及相关领域的科学证据,协助干预措施的制定是明智的。本研究的目的是征求专家意见并达成共识,以确定具体的运动处方参数,以尽量减少/恢复截肢者的 BMD 损失。
将使用 Delphi 技术在国际专家中达成共识;这将通过远程电子 Delphi 过程进行。将通过发表的研究或临床专业知识,从至少 2 个大洲和 5 个以上国家确定 10-15 名专家。第一轮将要求参与者使用 5 分李克特量表评估他们对与改善截肢者 BMD 的运动处方相关的陈述的同意程度。李克特量表上的同意程度将被视为≥3。在第一轮中允许开放反馈,如果少于 50%的专家同意任何陈述,则将其排除。在第二轮中,将添加第一轮反馈中的任何意见,重复其余陈述。在第三轮中,参与者将考虑群体意见的统计代表性,并考虑是否要相应地更改其任何回复,以反思他们在第二轮中的回复。如果专家中达到 70%或更高的同意率的陈述将被视为达成共识,并将在未来的运动干预试验中实施。
帝国理工学院研究伦理委员会已批准该研究(参考号:6463766)。德尔菲参与者将被要求提供数字知情同意书。研究结果将通过同行评审出版物传播。