ZOom Delivered Intervention Against Cognitive decline (ZODIAC) COVID-19 pandemic adaptations to the Post-Ischaemic Stroke Cardiovascular Exercise Study (PISCES): protocol for a randomised controlled trial of remotely delivered fitness training for brain health

Amy Brodtmann (Leading Author), Alex Billett, Rachael Telfer, Kim Adkins, Laura White, Laura J.E. McCambridge, Louise M. Burrell, Vincent Thijs, Sharon Kramer, Emilio Werden, Barbara R. Cardoso, Matthew Pase, Stanley Hughwa Hung, Leonid Churilov, Julie Bernhardt, Kathryn Hayward, Liam Johnson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleOtherpeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Stroke increases subsequent dementia risk yet there are no specific post-stroke therapies to protect cognition. Cardiorespiratory exercise is recommended for secondary prevention of stroke and may be neuroprotective. The Post Ischaemic Stroke Cardiovascular Exercise Study (PISCES) aims to reduce post-stroke secondary neurodegeneration and cognitive decline. During the pandemic, we pivoted to a ZOom Delivered Intervention Against Cognitive decline (ZODIAC) protocol, reducing pandemic-amplified barriers to exercise. Methods: We present pandemic adaptions for a multicentre phase IIb assessor-blinded randomised controlled trial of ischaemic stroke survivors testing the efficacy and feasibility of an 8-week home-based exercise intervention delivered at 2 months post-stroke. We compare cardiorespiratory exercise (intervention arm) versus balance and stretching (active control arm). Participants are assessed with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), fitness, blood, microbiome, and neuropsychological tests at three study visits: before and after the exercise intervention and at 12 months. Modifications to the original protocol include pre-exercise safety home visits, commercial delivery of exercise equipment to facilitate assessor blinding, and reconsideration of statistical plan to allow pooling of the studies. We have reduced in-person study visits from 27 to 3. Primary outcome remains between-group (intervention versus control) difference in brain volume change; secondary outcome is between-group difference in global cognitive ability to allow remote administration of a validated cognitive scale. Discussion: Remotely delivered exercise interventions reduce participant burden and may reduce barriers to recruitment. A decrease in the number of in-person study visits can be supported by greater information capture via self-reported questionnaires and phone surveys. Trial registration: Prospectively ACTRN12616000942459. Registered on July 2016.

Original languageEnglish
Article number329
Number of pages12
JournalTrials
Volume25
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2024

Keywords

  • Brain volume
  • Cognition
  • Dementia
  • Exercise training
  • Ischaemic stroke
  • Physical activity
  • Telerehabilitation

Cite this