Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT02830828 |
Other study ID # |
RRK5257 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
March 27, 2015 |
Last updated |
June 4, 2017 |
Start date |
March 2015 |
Est. completion date |
September 2017 |
Study information
Verified date |
June 2017 |
Source |
University Hospital Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust |
Contact |
Thomas E Pidgeon, BMedSc, MBChB |
Phone |
0121 371 4992 |
Email |
tompidgeon[@]hotmail.com |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
INTRODUCTION Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is a common condition that results in impaired
hand function. In cases of CTS the "pinch grip" force between the thumb and index finger
becomes unnecessarily high to prevent objects from slipping when they are picked up.
HYPOTHESES The proposed study will investigate the following hypotheses regarding CTS.
As an object is picked up, the investigators suspect there will be several points at which
grip force will be different between patients with different severities of CTS, i.e. grip
may deteriorate as CTS gets worse.
The investigators also suspect grip force will be affected depending on the weight of the
object, i.e. patients with CTS may struggle with objects of a certain weight.
Patients with CTS sweat less, and this may affect their grip. The investigators suspect that
pinch grip in CTS patients is disproportionately altered by the frictional properties of the
object and by the moistness of the skin.
The investigators suspect patients with CTS will be less able to adapt to sudden changes in
an object's weight.
The investigators wish to examine how the above are affected after surgical treatment of
CTS.
METHODS The investigators will include patients with symptomatic, idiopathic CTS, aged
between 18 and 80 years. The investigators' centre will recruit CTS patients who will attend
their National Health Service (NHS) outpatient appointment followed by nerve conduction
studies. An equal number of healthy participants will be recruited for comparison purposes.
At the aforementioned appointment, patients will undertake a pinch grip force test using a
device that will test the above points.
Patients will have normal care under their surgeon, which may include an operation for
treatment of CTS. Therefore some patients will be invited back to have grip tests again
after their operation. No aspect of the study will prevent a patient from receiving their
normal National Health Service (NHS) care.
Description:
RESEARCH QUESTIONS
This study will ask important questions about CTS that builds on previous research in the
field. The research questions are:
- How is precision pinch grip force affected by CTS throughout the activity of picking up
and replacing an object, for a range of CTS severities, especially in more severe CTS?
- How is precision pinch grip force affected in patients with CTS when picking up objects
of different weights?
- How is precision pinch grip force affected in patients with CTS when the frictional
properties of the skin-device interface are altered?
- How does precision pinch grip force in CTS alter after a sudden increase in downward
load force?
- How do these parameters change after surgical treatment of CTS?
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS AND STUDY JUSTIFICATION Answers to the above questions will inform
understanding of both precision pinch grip force control, and CTS.
Patients with CTS drop things, and the investigators feel that impaired hand function in CTS
is related to poor grip control.
Previous authors have recognised that pinch grip force is affected by in CTS (Hsu et al.
2013). The investigators intend to extend this work by showing how other aspects of force
control are altered in CTS throughout the action of picking an object up, and how they
correlate with CTS severity. This will allow us to use different readings taken during a
pinch grip test to assess CTS severity. This will also reveal how heavy objects may have a
greater adverse affect on grip control in CTS patients.
If successful, pinch grip testing could form a table-top test for CTS and nerve injury
evaluation and may allow better patient selection for surgery.
The investigators will also account for skin hydration, as sweating is impaired in CTS, and
rarely accounted for in previous work. (This has since been abandoned mid-study). When
examining how friction impacts on precision pinch force in CTS, investigators may inform
understanding of how investigators could design occupational aids for those with median
nerve problems.
Investigating how patients with CTS compensate when an object they are holding suddenly
changes weight, will help us understand reflexes that are co-ordinated by the hand, and may
help us in working towards rehabilitating patients after nerve injury affecting the upper
limb.
We currently do not have good evidence about which patients should have surgery in CTS or
whether surgery restores the hand function that was lost when patients were suffering with
CTS. Investigating what happens to the above after surgery, may show us the best time to
operate on these patients, which patients we should prioritise and whether surgery actually
improves pinch force control post-operatively.
DEVELOPMENT OF RESEARCH PROPOSAL This research proposal has been formulated with experience
from senior hand surgeons and multidisciplinary team professionals at a regional hand
surgery centre with an active research base (The Birmingham Hand Centre, University
Hospitals Birmingham, UK). Consultation has been carried out with the attached University of
Birmingham's Department of School of Psychology. A lead collaborator is the department's
Professor of Human Movement.
RECRUITMENT Patients with CTS will routinely be referred to the investigators' centre for
assessment and treatment of CTS. They would normally be referred to the centre by their GP,
receive an appointment letter and attend the hospital. They would then be evaluated
clinically and with nerve conduction tests. This may be by a hand surgery consultant or
member of the hand team. Patients may then receive a date for surgery and would be followed
up if necessary. The Principle Investigator and one Local Collaborator are both consultant
hand surgeons who would receive referrals and see these patients in clinic.
Recruitment will occur at one of the following points;
1. At the point at which patients are referred to the Principle Investigator, patients
will be offered the chance to participate in their appointment letter which will
contain the Participant Information Sheet. This will be further assessed upon
presentation to clinic.
2. Some patients are listed for surgery without being seen in the investigators' research
clinic, but are suitable for inclusion and are therefore "missed". The investigators
intend to recruit these patients already listed for operations for carpal tunnel
syndrome on the day of surgery. The Chief Investigator will approach these patients on
the day of their operation to seek their permission to carry out pinch-grip testing
before surgery. Patients would receive the Patient Information Sheet from the Chief
Investigator, and would be consented for study inclusion and tested within the
Ambulatory Care Unit of the hospital whilst waiting for their operation. There would be
no alteration to their normal care and certainly no delay to their operation.
Recruitment will not affect normal NHS (National Health Service) care in any way. Very
limited data (if any) can be collected until the point at which the patient attends for
their normal NHS (National Health Service) appointment. If they choose not to take part,
they can attend their normal NHS (National Health Service) appointment without the need to
undergo grip testing. No therapeutic promises are made by the Participant Information Sheet.
Recruitment of "control" participants; Healthy, age-gender matched controls will be invited
from the staff and student body from the University of Birmingham to take part in the pinch
grip testing exercise alone to act as a control group.
The investigators will request responses from university members aged 18-80. Potential
participants will be invited to take part by email circulated to staff and students.
Interested participants who respond by email will receive the full Participant Information
Sheet for Controls. This will specify that the only information collected will comprise
their age, gender, hand dominance and the grip test data (GP Contact details will be stored
anonymously in the case that incidental findings are discovered and warrant action).
They will be invited to attend the University Hospital Birmingham where grip strength tests
are performed to undergo testing according to the same protocol outlined for the patient
group. This is the point at which consent will be taken by the Chief Investigator or an
appropriate member of the research team.
The sample size will be determined by the power analysis run at the beginning of the study,
but is expected to comprise 50 patients.
This recruitment process was noted mid-study to be failing to recruit age-matched controls.
As an alternative, patients were matched with their own, contralateral hand if it was free
of symptoms of CTS.
No formal power analysis took place, as the minimally important clinical difference was not
known.
INCLUSION/ EXCLUSION CRITERIA
Inclusion criteria:
Patients with symptomatic, idiopathic CTS (as affirmed by clinical examination and NCS)
presenting to clinic Aged between 18 and 80 years In contrast to other studies the
investigators would include patients with; Previous upper limb injuries Previous upper limb
surgery or CTS intervention (e.g. steroid injections) Diabetes mellitus Any other upper limb
nerve neuropathies or upper limb neurology Upper limb musculoskeletal degenerative disease
(osteoarthritis) Thyroid disease, (Zhang et al. 2011). This will create a pragmatic study
design, generalisable to a wider population in clinical practice.
Exclusion Criteria:
Central neurological or psychiatric disease Visual impairment or any other impairment that
would interfere with the patient's ability to perform the study tests Pregnant patients.
(Criteria based on prior research (Zhang et al. 2011)).
CONSENT The consent form is that suggested by the Medical Reseach Council (MRC) Health
Research Authority and the Participant Information Sheet follows their guidelines. Both will
be distributed in appointment letters sent to patients. Informed consent to participate will
be confirmed during the original clinic appointment. Members of the hand team consent
patients for operations almost daily, and should be fully familiar with assessment of
capacity and understanding the ethical principles underpinning informed consent. Consent
will be obtained by the Chief Investigator (CI). The study will not include the assessment
of children or vulnerable adults
RISKS, BURDENS AND BENEFITS Patients will be informed of all risks and benefits anticipated
using the Participant Information Sheet. The investigators cannot guarantee any treatment
benefits and do not yet know what the results will show. However, patients will be helping
us understand an important problem affecting many other similar patients. These patients may
benefit from this research in the future. With their consent, a lay summary will be
circulated to the patients and controls after the completion of the study to inform them of
the results of the work. They will be consented for this and informed of this in the
participation sheets. Their preferred contact details will be stored separately in the index
spreadsheet on the trust computer system and will not be linked with clinical data.
The intent is to carry out pinch grip force testing on CTS patients. This will add to the
time patients are asked to stay in clinic by about 30 minutes. They will be fully informed
and asked whether they wish to participate, prior to being invited to take part in precision
pinch grip testing. This will not affect their access to assessment or treatment of their
CTS.
The intent is to test precision pinch grip testing with a custom built device being
developed by the University of Birmingham. This device is based on those already used by
Zhang and Hsu et al, and is not anticipated to pose any risk of harm to the patient. The
investigators do not know of any side effects that there may be from the grip test. Patients
may find their hand to be a little tired after the test; however this should not last long
and should not be severe. The investigators think the risk of injury posed to patients by
the grip device is very small. The investigating team will have trialed the device on
healthy volunteering members of the research team prior to use in the study.
The investigators do not think that there will be any risks; including but not limited to
psychological or physical harm, posed by the study that fall outside the risks inherent in
normal clinical care.
Confidentiality breech is extremely unlikely, as all information will be stored on NHS
(National Health Service) trust computers, however the investigators acknowledge this risk.
Only clinicians involved in patient care or researchers from within the study team will have
access to patients' clinical details. Patients will be consented to allow non-clinical
members of the research team (university staff) access to essential information for the
study; however this information will be kept to an absolute minimum. For example, if a
researcher performs the "pinch-grip" test, it is fair to assume that researcher will become
aware that the patient has a diagnosis of CTS. Patients will have been consented for this.
The burden of patients being requested to attend three subsequent follow-up appointments is
acknowledged, however the above benefits patients may feel in contributing to this study
will encourage them to attend.
The study sponsor (UHB) will be updated throughout, with special emphasis placed on drawing
attention to any risks or burdens that emerge after the start of the study.
The above risks are all conveyed in the Participant Information Sheet.
CONFIDENTIALITY Confidentiality Principles Principle 1: The purposes of obtaining patient
information are outlined above. Principle 2 and 3: Person-identifiable data will not be
collected. Participants will be identified by UHB Patient Number.
Principle 4: Access to person-identifiable data will be limited to members of the treating
clinical team only. If non-clinical collaborators perform the precision pinch-grip test in
clinic, they will not have access to patient-identifiable clinical details, during the test
or afterwards during analysis.
Principle 5 and 6: All clinical team members are aware of their commitment to
confidentiality and the law.
The investigators do not anticipate that these principles will need to be breached in order
to prevent serious patient harm. If however, this situation arises, it will be discussed
between the Chief and Principle Investigators, the relevant authorities will be contacted
for advice and action taken whilst taking all steps to safely inform affected patients as
early as possible.
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST The Principle or Chief Investigators will be involved in clinical
evaluation of CTS patients at their appointment. Special care will be taken to ensure
patients are aware that study participation does not affect their normal care in any way.
Care will be taken to avoid any form of coercion. The Principle or Chief Investigators may
also perform surgical treatment on appropriate patients, however this is separate to the
study and should not affect care in any way. Effort will be made to ensure patients are not
coerced into returning for follow-up grip testing after their operation. Patients may wish
to attend extra follow-up appointments. At the end of the study, patients are discharged
back to the care of their GP, to be referred back if any concerns arise (as is normal
practice). Participants will be aware that they will not know the results of their grip
tests, but the intent will be to publish a full paper within twelve months.
HUMAN TISSUE Non- applicable
OTHER ETHICAL ISSUES The intent is to carry out pinch grip force testing on CTS patients.
This will add to the time patients are asked to stay in clinic. They will be fully informed
and asked whether they wish to participate, prior to being invited to take part in precision
pinch grip testing. This will not affect their access to assessment or treatment of their
CTS.
The intent is to test precision pinch grip testing with a custom built device being
developed by the University of Birmingham. This device is based on those already used by
Zhang and Hsu et al, and is not anticipated to pose any risk of harm to the patient.
OTHER LEGAL ISSUES As the device is being custom-built by the University of Birmingham,
intellectual property rights are being addressed by the department developing the device,
with a view to drawing up a confidentiality agreement, although this is not a pre-requisite
to commencing the trial.
OTHER MANAGEMENT ISSUES This intention is to set-up an National Health Service (NHS) clinic
of back-to-back CTS patients, who will have a clinical assessment, followed by nerve
conduction studies, followed by pinch grip assessment. This will require logistic planning,
however this will be co-ordinated internally through UHB and will make the process clear to
patients when they are recruited to the study via the Participant Information Sheet.