Effects of a Robot-based Sensorimotor Upper Limb Rehabilitation Paradigm in Chronic Stroke: a Randomized Controlled Trial

Authors
Category Primary study
Registry of Trialsclinicaltrials.gov
Year 2026
Sensorimotor function of the upper limb is commonly impaired after stroke, even in the chronic phase (\>6 months post-stroke). Nevertheless, good sensorimotor function is needed for daily life functioning. Sensorimotor function can be divided into three components: exteroception, proprioception and sensory processing. It is important that those three components will each be addressed in the upper limb rehabilitation. Unfortunately, there is still no optimal therapy to address sensory processing. Therefore, we developed an intensive sensorimotor robot-based rehabilitation paradigm (called ROBUST) with focus on sensory processing. As a first step, we did a pilot study (S69003) including 10 persons with chronic stroke to investigate the potential effectiveness and feasibility of this novel rehabilitation. The median change score of motor, sensory and sensorimotor assessments was exceeding the minimal clinical important difference (MCID), and the total amount of therapy was feasible as well. The investigated protocols to measure potential changes in brain function (activity and connectivity) and structure accompanying the novel therapy appeared feasible as well. Based on this first pilot study, we finalized the protocol for this RCT to investigate the effectiveness of the ROBUST intervention.
Epistemonikos ID: 5a8f8a16555b90e026154f8a4b26bf05b76ff482
First added on: Apr 24, 2026