Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04792606 |
Other study ID # |
420492 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Recruiting |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
October 1, 2019 |
Est. completion date |
March 31, 2028 |
Study information
Verified date |
March 2021 |
Source |
The Hospital for Sick Children |
Contact |
Unni G Narayanan, MD |
Phone |
416-813-6432 |
Email |
unni.narayanan[@]sickkids.ca |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Children with severe cerebral palsy (CP) are at high risk for progressive hip displacement,
associated with pain and contractures interfering with many aspects of care, comfort and
quality of life. These children undergo many types of interventions, the optimal timing and
effectiveness of which, remain unclear. In 2014, CIHR funded the CP Hip Outcomes Project
(CHOP), an international multi-centre prospective longitudinal cohort study of children with
severe (non-ambulant) CP with evidence of hip displacement defined as a Reimer's migration
percentage (MP) of at least 30%. The study was designed to evaluate the comparative
effectiveness of different treatment strategies to prevent or relieve symptoms associated
with hip instability, using the validated Caregiver Priorities and Child Health Index of Life
with Disabilities (CPCHILD ) questionnaire as the primary outcome measure of health-related
quality of life © (HRQL) for this population. 650 patients enrolled from 28 sites in 11
countries, are actively being followed and will reach at least 2 years of follow-up at the
end of 2019. This project, will study the impact of hip instability and its management in
children with severe CP using the CPCHILD questionnaire that was developed specifically for
this purpose. Although CHOP will define outcomes at 24 months, the outcomes are not expected
to remain stable while the child is still growing. The inception cohort will need follow-up
until skeletal maturity to track their long-term outcome trajectories.
Description:
Background: Children with severe cerebral palsy (CP) are at high risk for progressive hip
displacement, associated with pain and contractures interfering with many aspects of care,
comfort and quality of life. These children undergo many types of interventions, the optimal
timing and effectiveness of which, remain unclear. In 2014, CIHR funded the CP Hip Outcomes
Project (CHOP), an international multi-centre prospective longitudinal cohort study of
children with severe (non-ambulant) CP with evidence of hip displacement defined as a
Reimer's migration percentage (MP) of at least 30%. The study was designed to evaluate the
comparative effectiveness of different treatment strategies to prevent or relieve symptoms
associated with hip instability, using the validated Caregiver Priorities and Child Health
Index of Life with Disabilities (CPCHILD ) questionnaire as the primary outcome measure of
health-related quality of life © (HRQL) for this population. 650 patients enrolled from 28
sites in 11 countries, are actively being followed and will reach at least 2 years of
follow-up at the end of 2019. This project, unique in scale and design, will study the impact
of hip instability and its management in children with severe CP using a meaningful outcome
measure that was developed specifically for this purpose. Although CHOP will define outcomes
at 24 months, the outcomes are not expected to remain stable while the child is still
growing. The inception cohort will need follow-up until skeletal maturity to track their
long-term outcome trajectories. The international network of investigators/sites and the
infrastructure established for CHOP will facilitate the long-term follow-up of the
participants in this study. In addition, the results of CHOP will inform the design of nested
trials to evaluate the effectiveness of future interventions aimed at improving the quality
of life of children with severe disabilities.
Study Aims Aim 1: Measure the post 24-month effectiveness of different treatment strategies
for hip displacement in children with severe CP using the CPCHILD as the primary outcome
measure.
Aim 2: Compare the rates of recurrence, relapse of symptoms, additional interventions and
other longer term complications associated with each of the treatment cohorts.
Methods
Study Design: Multi-centre longitudinal cohort study of children with severe (non-ambulant)
CP, ages 3 to 18 years with hip MP ≥ 30% enrolled in one of 5 cohorts:
A. "Natural" History or watchful waiting B. Serial botulinum toxin injections C. Adductor
(+/- psoas) muscle releases alone D. Hip reconstructive surgery E. Salvage hip surgery Data
collected include demographics, prognostic factors, including co-morbid conditions, parental
reports of HRQL as measured by the CPCHILD, and radiographic measures of MP and acetabular
index (AI). The primary outcome measure CPCHILD, as well as the MP & AI will be assessed
every 12 months after the 24 month follow-up since inception in CHOP. The cohort of 650
children enrolled in Groups B, C, D, & E will be compared with each other as well as with
their respective propensity matched counterparts of untreated children (Group A), using
repeated measures ANOCOVA at 3yrs, and annually thereafter until at least 5 years of
follow-up or skeletal maturity.
Significance: CHOP I & II will establish the superiority of either prophylactic or reactive
intervention strategies for hip displacement in severe CP and provide justification for hip
surveillance.