Nature Communications (Feb 2024)

Efficacy and safety of using auditory-motor entrainment to improve walking after stroke: a multi-site randomized controlled trial of InTandemTM

  • Louis N. Awad,
  • Arun Jayaraman,
  • Karen J. Nolan,
  • Michael D. Lewek,
  • Paolo Bonato,
  • Mark Newman,
  • David Putrino,
  • Preeti Raghavan,
  • Ryan T. Pohlig,
  • Brian A. Harris,
  • Danielle A. Parker,
  • Sabrina R. Taylor

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-44791-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Walking slowly after stroke reduces health and quality of life. This multi-site, prospective, interventional, 2-arm randomized controlled trial (NCT04121754) evaluated the safety and efficacy of an autonomous neurorehabilitation system (InTandemTM) designed to use auditory-motor entrainment to improve post-stroke walking. 87 individuals were randomized to 5-week walking interventions with InTandem or Active Control (i.e., walking without InTandem). The primary endpoints were change in walking speed, measured by the 10-meter walk test pre-vs-post each 5-week intervention, and safety, measured as the frequency of adverse events (AEs). Clinical responder rates were also compared. The trial met its primary endpoints. InTandem was associated with a 2x larger increase in speed (Δ: 0.14 ± 0.03 m/s versus Δ: 0.06 ± 0.02 m/s, F(1,49) = 6.58, p = 0.013), 3x more responders (40% versus 13%, χ2(1) ≥ 6.47, p = 0.01), and similar safety (both groups experienced the same number of AEs). The auditory-motor intervention autonomously delivered by InTandem is safe and effective in improving walking in the chronic phase of stroke.