This study is a two-arm, controlled, parallel-group clinical trial designed to evaluate the effectiveness, adherence, and satisfaction of a telerehabilitation (TR) program combining core stability and strength exercises with an educational component for people with moderate hereditary ataxia.
Participants will be consecutively recruited through the Catalan Association of Hereditary Ataxias (ACAH), the CSUR Centre for Ataxias and Hereditary Spastic Paraparesis at Hospital Clínic de Barcelona. Eligible participants must have a diagnosis of hereditary spinocerebellar ataxia, moderate severity according to the SARA scale (10-20 points), internet access, basic digital literacy, and provide informed consent.
Participants will be randomly allocated to an intervention or control group. The intervention group will receive three preliminary online educational sessions and then follow a 12-week home-based exercise program delivered through a dedicated telerehabilitation platform. The platform includes pre-recorded videos, weekly synchronous physiotherapy sessions, automated reminders, personal diaries, and interactive features to promote adherence and engagement.
The control group will complete the same 12-week exercise program using printed materials and videos hosted in a cloud repository, supported only by periodic telephone follow-up, without educational sessions or access to the platform.
All participants will undergo four assessments: baseline (T0), post-intervention (T1), and follow-ups at three months (T2) and six months (T3).
The primary outcome is trunk control and sitting balance assessed with the Spanish version of the Trunk Impairment Scale (TIS 2.0). Secondary outcomes include lower limb strength (5x Sit-to-Stand Test), transfer ability (Transfer Assessment Instrument 4.0), upper limb function (Upper Extremity Functional Index), walking speed (4MWT), functional mobility (Timed Up and Go), disease severity (SARA), activities of daily living, health status, falls, adherence (Exercise Adherence Rating Scale and session completion rate), and satisfaction.
Quantitative analyses will follow CONSORT guidelines for non-pharmacological trials, while qualitative data on adherence, satisfaction, perceived risks and benefits, and acceptability will be collected through semi-structured interviews and analyzed thematically according to the COREQ EQUATOR 17 guidelines.
This study will provide evidence on the feasibility, effectiveness, and acceptability of a digital home-based rehabilitation approach for a population with limited access to specialized services, aiming to promote functional autonomy and quality of life while reducing healthcare disparities.