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Dosage, Intensity, and Frequency of Language Therapy for Aphasia: A Systematic Review-Based, Individual Participant Data Network Meta-Analysis

Brady, Marian C.; Ali, Myzoon; VandenBerg, Kathryn; Williams, Linda J.; Williams, Louise R.; Abo, Masahiro; Becker, Frank; Bowen, Audrey; Brandenburg, Caitlin; Breitenstein, Caterina; Bruehl, Stefanie; Copland, David A.; Cranfill, Tamara B.; di Pietro-Bachmann, Marie; Enderby, Pamela; Fillingham, Joanne; Galli, Federica Lucia; Gandolfi, Marialuisa; Glize, Bertrand; Godecke, Erin; Hawkins, Neil; Hilari, Katerina; Hinckley, Jacqueline; Horton, Simon; Howard, David; Jaecks, Petra; Jefferies, Elizabeth; Jesus, Luis M.T.; Kambanaros, Maria; Kang, Eun Kyoung; Khedr, Eman M.; Kong, Anthony Pak Hin; Kukkonen, Tarja; Laganaro, Marina; Lambon Ralph, Matthew A.; Laska, Ann Charlotte; Leemann, Béatrice; Leff, Alexander P.; Lima, Roxele R.; Lorenz, Antje; MacWhinney, Brian; Marshall, Rebecca Shisler; Mattioli, Flavia; Maviş, İlknur; Meinzer, Marcus; Nilipour, Reza; Noé, Enrique; Paik, Nam Jong; Palmer, Rebecca; Papathanasiou, Ilias (2022-03)

 
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brady-et-al-2021-dosage-intensity-and-frequency-of-language-therapy-for-aphasia-a-systematic-review-based-individual.pdf (1.749Mt)
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Brady, Marian C.
Ali, Myzoon
VandenBerg, Kathryn
Williams, Linda J.
Williams, Louise R.
Abo, Masahiro
Becker, Frank
Bowen, Audrey
Brandenburg, Caitlin
Breitenstein, Caterina
Bruehl, Stefanie
Copland, David A.
Cranfill, Tamara B.
di Pietro-Bachmann, Marie
Enderby, Pamela
Fillingham, Joanne
Galli, Federica Lucia
Gandolfi, Marialuisa
Glize, Bertrand
Godecke, Erin
Hawkins, Neil
Hilari, Katerina
Hinckley, Jacqueline
Horton, Simon
Howard, David
Jaecks, Petra
Jefferies, Elizabeth
Jesus, Luis M.T.
Kambanaros, Maria
Kang, Eun Kyoung
Khedr, Eman M.
Kong, Anthony Pak Hin
Kukkonen, Tarja
Laganaro, Marina
Lambon Ralph, Matthew A.
Laska, Ann Charlotte
Leemann, Béatrice
Leff, Alexander P.
Lima, Roxele R.
Lorenz, Antje
MacWhinney, Brian
Marshall, Rebecca Shisler
Mattioli, Flavia
Maviş, İlknur
Meinzer, Marcus
Nilipour, Reza
Noé, Enrique
Paik, Nam Jong
Palmer, Rebecca
Papathanasiou, Ilias
03 / 2022

STROKE
doi:10.1161/STROKEAHA.121.035216
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202401261870

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Peer reviewed
Tiivistelmä
Background and Purpose: Optimizing speech and language therapy (SLT) regimens for maximal aphasia recovery is a clinical research priority. We examined associations between SLT intensity (hours/week), dosage (total hours), frequency (days/week), duration (weeks), delivery (face to face, computer supported, individual tailoring, and home practice), content, and language outcomes for people with aphasia. Methods: Databases including MEDLINE and Embase were searched (inception to September 2015). Published, unpublished, and emerging trials including SLT and ≥10 individual participant data on aphasia, language outcomes, and time post-onset were selected. Patient-level data on stroke, language, SLT, and trial risk of bias were independently extracted. Outcome measurement scores were standardized. A statistical inferencing, one-stage, random effects, network meta-analysis approach filtered individual participant data into an optimal model examining SLT regimen for overall language, auditory comprehension, naming, and functional communication pre-post intervention gains, adjusting for a priori-defined covariates (age, sex, time poststroke, and baseline aphasia severity), reporting estimates of mean change scores (95% CI). Results: Data from 959 individual participant data (25 trials) were included. Greatest gains in overall language and comprehension were associated with >20 to 50 hours SLT dosage (18.37 [10.58-26.16] Western Aphasia Battery-Aphasia Quotient; 5.23 [1.51-8.95] Aachen Aphasia Test-Token Test). Greatest clinical overall language, functional communication, and comprehension gains were associated with 2 to 4 and 9+ SLT hours/week. Greatest clinical gains were associated with frequent SLT for overall language, functional communication (3-5+ days/week), and comprehension (4-5 days/week). Evidence of comprehension gains was absent for SLT ≤20 hours, <3 hours/week, and ≤3 days/week. Mixed receptive-expressive therapy, functionally tailored, with prescribed home practice was associated with the greatest overall gains. Relative variance was <30%. Risk of trial bias was low to moderate; low for meta-biases. Conclusions: Greatest language recovery was associated with frequent, functionally tailored, receptive-expressive SLT, with prescribed home practice at a greater intensity and duration than reports of usual clinical services internationally. These exploratory findings suggest critical therapeutic ranges, informing hypothesis-testing trials and tailoring of clinical services. Registration: URL: https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/; Unique identifier: CRD42018110947.
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Kalevantie 5
PL 617
33014 Tampereen yliopisto
oa[@]tuni.fi | Tietosuoja | Saavutettavuusseloste