Open Access
Open access
Chiropractic and Manual Therapies, volume 32, issue 1, publication number 3

Is blinding in studies of manual soft tissue mobilisation of the back possible? A feasibility randomised controlled trial with Swiss graduate students

Javier Muñoz Laguna 1, 2, 3
Emanuela Nyantakyi 4
Urmila Bhattacharyya 5
Kathrin Blum 4
Matteo Delucchi 6, 7
Felix Karl-Ludwig Klingebiel 8, 9
Marco Labarile 10
Andrea Roggo 11
Manuel Weber 12
Thomas Radtke 2
Milo A Puhan 2
Cesar A. Hincapié 1, 2, 3
Show full list: 12 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2024-01-29
scimago Q1
SJR0.601
CiteScore3.2
Impact factor2
ISSN2045709X
Complementary and alternative medicine
Chiropractics
Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation
Abstract
Study design

Single-centre, two-parallel group, methodological randomised controlled trial to assess blinding feasibility.

Background

Trials of manual therapy interventions of the back face methodological challenges regarding blinding feasibility and success. We assessed the feasibility of blinding an active manual soft tissue mobilisation and control intervention of the back. We also assessed whether blinding is feasible among outcome assessors and explored factors influencing perceptions about intervention assignment.

Methods

On 7–8 November 2022, 24 participants were randomly allocated (1:1 ratio) to active or control manual interventions of the back. The active group (n = 11) received soft tissue mobilisation of the lumbar spine. The control group (n = 13) received light touch over the thoracic region with deep breathing exercises. The primary outcome was blinding of participants immediately after a one-time intervention session, as measured by the Bang blinding index (Bang BI). Bang BI ranges from –1 (complete opposite perceptions of intervention received) to 1 (complete correct perceptions), with 0 indicating ‘random guessing’—balanced ‘active’ and ‘control’ perceptions within an intervention arm. Secondary outcomes included blinding of outcome assessors and factors influencing perceptions about intervention assignment among both participants and outcome assessors, explored via thematic analysis.

Results

24 participants were analysed following an intention-to-treat approach. 55% of participants in the active manual soft tissue mobilisation group correctly perceived their group assignment beyond chance immediately after intervention (Bang BI: 0.55 [95% confidence interval (CI), 0.25 to 0.84]), and 8% did so in the control group (0.08 [95% CI, −0.37 to 0.53]). Bang BIs in outcome assessors were 0.09 (−0.12 to 0.30) and −0.10 (−0.29 to 0.08) for active and control participants, respectively. Participants and outcome assessors reported varying factors related to their perceptions about intervention assignment.

Conclusions

Blinding of participants allocated to an active soft tissue mobilisation of the back was not feasible in this methodological trial, whereas blinding of participants allocated to the control intervention and outcome assessors was adequate. Findings are limited due to imprecision and suboptimal generalisability to clinical settings. Careful thinking and consideration of blinding in manual therapy trials is warranted and needed.

Trial registration

ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT05822947 (retrospectively registered)

Found 
Found 

Top-30

Journals

1
1

Publishers

1
2
1
2
  • We do not take into account publications without a DOI.
  • Statistics recalculated only for publications connected to researchers, organizations and labs registered on the platform.
  • Statistics recalculated weekly.

Are you a researcher?

Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.
Share
Cite this
GOST | RIS | BibTex
Found error?