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Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine whether operative fixation of unilateral flail chest provides greater benefit than non-operative treatment.


Clinical Trial Description

Chest trauma is frequent in the multiply-injured patient and is directly responsible for 20-25% of trauma deaths. Additionally, chest trauma is a major contributory factor in another 25% of deaths after trauma. Besides short term mortality, injuries to the chest result in significant morbidity and cost of care and long term disability. Among patients sustaining chest trauma, flail chest is one of the more serious injuries. Patients require prolonged ventilation, ICU and hospital stays and have a high incidence of pulmonary infections. Survivors often go on to have significant impairment of pulmonary function and over half may never return to gainful employment.

The standard therapy of injuries to the chest wall, including flail chest has been effective analgesia, pulmonary toilet with postural drainage and aggressive chest physical therapy. Despite these measures, flail chest patients often do not do well. Early operative fixation (surgical anchoring and bracing of bones) to stabilize the chest wall and restore pulmonary dynamics has always been an attractive option. With improvements in patient selection, availability of good modern anesthesia and critical care, and mechanical fixation devices, small studies and several case reports testify to the feasibility of the concept and possible short and long term benefits. All but one small institutional study are retrospective in nature limiting the generalizability of the conclusions. In that small single institutional prospective trial in which patients with flail chest were randomized to either early operative fixation or standard non-operative therapy, patients randomized to early operative fixation showed significant improvements in both short- and long-term health outcomes resulting in lower in-hospital costs in the surgically treated group. Despite these very impressive results, although prospective, it is one study with a small number of patients from a single institution. The question of the benefits of operative fixation can only be conclusively answered by a larger multi-institutional prospective randomized study. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01147471
Study type Interventional
Source Virginia Commonwealth University
Contact
Status Terminated
Phase N/A
Start date September 2010
Completion date August 2014

See also
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Completed NCT02132416 - Operative Treatment of Unstable Thoracic Cage Injuries and Chest Wall Deformity in Trauma N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT01367951 - Treatment of Acute, Unstable Chest Wall Injuries N/A
Completed NCT00298259 - Trial of Operative Fixation of Fractured Ribs in Patients With Flail Chest Phase 2
Not yet recruiting NCT03413059 - Thoracic Epidural Analgesia in Flail Chest Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT00810251 - MatrixRIB Implants for Surgical Stabilization of Flail Chest Injuries: A Registry Phase 4
Recruiting NCT02595593 - Rib Fixation for Clinically Severe Rib Fractures From Trauma N/A
Completed NCT01308697 - Flail Chest: A Randomized Controlled Study N/A