Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Withdrawn
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04867018 |
Other study ID # |
333333 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Withdrawn |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
June 1, 2022 |
Est. completion date |
June 1, 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
February 2022 |
Source |
Vanderbilt University Medical Center |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Our overarching aim is to define the pathophysiology, epidemiology, and natural history of HO
by following patients from date of injury until full wound healing has occurred and the
window for HO has passed.
Specific aims
Aim 1: To classify the acute and chronic physiologic profiles of fracture patients and how
they relate to the development of HO. Here the investigators will look at the systemic
derangements to patients' coagulation, fibrinolytic, and inflammatory profiles.
Aim 2: Identify the true incidence and time course of HO development after traumatic
fracture. To accomplish this the investigators will look at patients who have sustained hip
fracture, midshaft/distal femur fracture, humerus fracture, proximal radius fracture, and
elbow dislocation/fractures and track follow-up images up to one year after injury looking
for HO.
Aim 3: Define the histologic characteristics of HO development. To accomplish this aim the
investigators will perform a histologic analysis on a sample of injured muscle surrounding
the fracture area.
Aim 4: To determine what comorbid, iatrogenic, or environmental influences are associated
with the formation of HO. To achieve this aim the investigators will evaluate data including
injury type, surgery type, operative duration, surgical approach, contamination (open vs
closed injury), complications (malunion, nonunion, infection, hardware failure, removal of
hardware), hardware type, comorbidities (smoking, cardiac history, diabetes), and
medications.
Description:
The aforementioned general inclusion/exclusion criteria will be used to determine patient
eligibility. All eligible patients will be identified using a patient list from StarPanel
provided by the managing team. The study will proceed until all eligible patients are
enrolled (our goal for this study is to recruit at least 1000 patients). If the patient
agrees to participate in the study they will be asked to sign an informed consent document by
the research team.
Arm 1
On Admission:
Demographics and Comorbidities The following patient data will be recorded: age, gender,
height, weight, date of admission, date of discharge, diagnosis, injury time, injury type,
laterality, surgical approach, implants used, duration of surgery, time to union,
contamination (open vs closed injury), comorbidities (smoking, cardiac history, diabetes,
etc.), current medications.
Labs Patients will have an additional 9ml of blood drawn during their normal course of care
for this study up to 4 times. The draws will happen while they are an inpatient in the
hospital. The timing of the draw will surround the timing of their operation. They will have
blood drawn within 24 hours before surgery, immediately after surgery, 24 hours after
surgery, and 72 hours after surgery. Labs values, including CBC with dif, CMP, D-Dimer, CRP,
PT/INR, PTT, fibrinogen, lactate, PAI-1, plasminogen activation assay, chromogenics,
plasmin-anti-plasmin complex, and phosphate will be collected for this study. Patient often
have a blood draw before and after surgery, one for typing and another as part of routine
labs. The investigators will use the remnants of those blood draws which will be stored in
the Vanderbilt Lab core and retrieved for further analysis by key research personnel. The
remaining plasma will come from another remnant blood or an extra draw.
Tissue Samples Intraoperatively, investigators will request a tissue sample of the debrided
injured muscle from the area where the surgeon is operating. There will be no additional
tissue sample taken during the surgery, but what is removed in the normal course of the
operation will be used for analysis in our study. The amount of tissue that will be analyzed
for this study will vary based on how much of the injured muscle the operating physician
decides to take in their normal course of operation. If the tissue sample is not readily
accessible, such as in the case of an intramedullary nail fixation, the investigators will
forgo the sample.
Follow-up
Radiographic imaging and notes from follow-up appointments will be examined for
complications, such as: malunion, nonunion, infection, hardware failure, removal of hardware,
presence of amorphous tissue calcification, symptomatic HO, or asymptomatic HO. Time to the
development of calcific complications, will also be recorded. To document post-surgical
complications the investigators will use imaging, photographs, progress notes, clinic notes,
ICD-9 codes, CPT codes and operative reports.
The time frame for follow up visits will be based on the preference of the participant's
physician. Any complications resulting from the injury will be documented. Complications will
be documented if they occur within 2 years of injury. No study activities will take place
during this time frame other than recording complications.
Clinical Practice Guidelines
All patients will be treated according to established clinical practice guidelines at
Vanderbilt Children's Hospital or Vanderbilt Medical Center, decreasing the chance that
differences in the patients' results and outcomes result from variability of the treating
physician.
Arm 2 Volunteers Blood Draw Blood will be taken from healthy, nonpregnant adults who weigh at
least 110 pounds. All volunteers will have a single blood draw of 100ml at the time of
consent. No more than 2.5% of the volunteer's blood volume will be taken at any point (100ml
maximum for a 110lb person in one sitting).