Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04686435 |
Other study ID # |
VHS Cohort 20/12316 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Active, not recruiting |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
January 4, 2021 |
Est. completion date |
January 4, 2028 |
Study information
Verified date |
February 2024 |
Source |
Vejle Hospital |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational [Patient Registry]
|
Clinical Trial Summary
In a longitudinal cohort project, the objective is to evaluate general prognostic and
individual risk factors for long lasting shoulder pain, with a specific focus on evaluation
of the association between metabolic syndrome and tendinopathy, while simultaneous adjusting
for other potential prognostic candidate variables (PROGRESS Theme I-II).
Description:
The VHS Cohort is a prospective cohort trial evaluating a wide range of patient reported and
clinical prognostic factors, attained prior to initiation of treatment, among shoulder
patients referred for diagnostic evaluation at the specialized shoulder unit at Vejle
Hospital, Denmark. The department receives approximately 2000 new patients each year.
Prior to medical examination, patients will be asked to fill in a baseline questionnaire, and
from the electronic patient record, a range of different clinical factors will be obtained.
Subsequently, patients will be asked to answer questionnaires on patient reported outcomes
after 1, 3, 6, and 12 months. Five years after inclusion into the trial, work affiliation
will be retrieved from registries in order to evaluate association between shoulder disorders
and work affiliation.
The objective of the VHS Cohort Project is to evaluate general prognostic and individual risk
factors for long lasting shoulder pain. A specific focus is evaluation of the association
between metabolic syndrome and rotator cuff tendinopathy while simultaneously adjusting for
other potential prognostic candidate variables (PROGRESS Theme I-II). In a subsequent cohort
(VHS Cohort Project II), the objective will be to develop a prognostic model for the
treatment effect of Rotator Cuff Related Shoulder Pain (RCRSP) (PROGRESS Theme III).
VHS Cohort Project I:
Aim 1: Evaluate the risk of consistent pain one year after diagnosis among patients diagnosed
with: RCRSP; Rotator cuff lesions (conservatively treated); Acromioclavicular osteoarthritis
and Adhesive capsulitis (PROGRESS Theme I).
Aim 2: Evaluate the risk of consistent pain one year after surgery for: subacromial
Decompression OR Rotator Cuff lesion (PROGRESS Theme I).
Aim 3: Evaluate the risk of consistent pain one year after diagnosis in patients with
metabolic syndrome compared to patients without metabolic syndrome, with particular emphasis
on patients diagnosed with RCRSP while simultaneously adjusting for other potential
prognostic candidate variables (PROGRESS Theme II).
We hypothesize that
- Significantly more patients with RCRSP have metabolic syndrome than patients diagnosed
with other shoulder-specific diagnoses
- Significantly more patients with metabolic syndrome and diagnosed with RCRSP are
classified as non-responders to treatment than patients with other shoulder specific
diagnoses 52 weeks after initial medical examination.
- Significantly more shoulder patients with metabolic syndrome report multiple
musculoskeletal pain sites than shoulder patients without metabolic syndrome at first
medical examination.
Aim 4: From clinical examination findings and patient reported information identify the
strongest individual predictors of prognostic value for persistent shoulder pain and
disability one year after initial medical examination in patients with rotator cuff related
pain syndrome (RCRSP) (Diagnostic codes: DM75.1; DM75.1A; DM75.1B; DM75.4; DM75.5; DM75.8;
DM75.9) treated conservatively with either exercise, corticosteroid injection, or a
combination of the two, while simultaneously adjusting for other potential prognostic
candidate variables (PROGRESS Theme II).
Aim 5: From clinical examination findings and patient reported information identify the
strongest individual preoperative predictors of prognostic value for persistent shoulder pain
and disability one year after surgery for patients receiving SubAcromial Decompression (SAD)
surgery (Procedure code: KNBH51), while simultaneous adjusting for other potential prognostic
candidate variables (PROGRESS Theme II).
Aim 6: From clinical examination findings and patient reported information, identify the
strongest individual predictors of five-year work participation rates.