Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02855983
Other study ID # UPittsburgh_PRF
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date August 2016
Est. completion date December 2019

Study information

Verified date January 2020
Source University of Pittsburgh
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The specific aim of this study is to determine whether perforating fat injections to the plantar fascia is a safe method to improve pain, quality of life, and reduce plantar fascia thickness for patients with chronic plantar fasciitis. We will also correlate the intrinsic fat properties of adipose stem cells (ie. growth factors) to the improvement in pain, quality of life, and plantar fascia thickness over time.


Description:

Aim 1: Evaluate the safety of perforating fat injection into the plantar fascia in patients with chronic plantar fasciitis to improve pain, quality of life, and thickness of the fascia.

Rationale: Perforating fat injections have been shown to improve multiple scar and fibrotic conditions such as burn scar contracture, breast radiation injury, and Dupuytren's contracture of the hand. (5-7) It is thought that the perforations allow expansion of the tissues, and filling them with fat allows for a regenerative healing process, rather than an inflammatory scar healing process.

Hypothesis: Perforating fat injections into the chronically thickened plantar fascia is a safe method to improve pain, quality of life, and reduce tissue thickness.

Aim 2: Correlate intrinsic fat properties of lipoaspirate to improvement in function and plantar fascia thickness.

Rationale: Adipose tissue contains adipose derived stem cells. Various growth factors released from the stem cells may have a local effect on soft tissues (ie. VEGF). (8) These stem cells are thought to promote regenerative healing, rather than scar formation and may ultimately improve the thickness of the plantar fascia. (9-12) Hypothesis: Intrinsic fat properties of lipoaspirate (adipose stem cell characteristics) are closely correlated to the improvements in quality of life and thickness of the plantar fascia.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 16
Est. completion date December 2019
Est. primary completion date December 2019
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria

Patients meeting the following criteria will be eligible to participate in the study:

1. Aged 18 years or older and able to provide informed consent

2. Subjects with a diagnosis of Plantar Fasciitis having heel pain that has not improved with splints, exercises or rountine standard of care treatment

3. Subjects must have a current relationship with their foot specialist managing the Plantar Fasciitis diagnosis.

4. Subjects must be 6 months post any surgical intervention to the affected foot

5. Subjects with a history of foot ulcer(s), the ulcer(s) must be healed with no recurrance for six months prior to consent to participate in this study.

6. Willing and able to comply with follow up examinations, including ultrasounds and radiographs

7. Subjects must be determined by the PI or a Co-Investigator to currently suffer from a diagnosis of chronic plantar fasciitis based on physician examination and foot evaluation.

Exclusion Criteria:

Patients with the following characteristics will be excluded from participating in the study:

1. Age less than 18 years

2. Inability to provide informed consent

3. Bilateral foot examination presents with open ulcerations, or diagnosis of osteomyelitis, non-healed fracture, neuropathy or tarsal tunnel syndrome.

4. Diabetics with a HgA1C >7

5. Current active and/or clinically significant infection identified anyway in the body, as demonstrated by physical assessment, laboratory findings, subject report and /or medical history.

6. Diagnosed with systemic or metastatic cancer within the last 12 months and /or presently receiving chemotherapy or radiation treatment

7. Known coagulopathy

8. Systemic disease that would render the fat harvest and injection procedure, along with associated local anesthetic unsafe to the patient.

9. Any isssue that per the physician's determination would render the patient not appropriate to continue participation in the study (compliance, change in physical status, etc. )

10. Diagnosis of Pregnancy or the intent to of the participant to become pregnant during her participation in this study

11. Subjects with a diagnosis of Schizophrenia or Bipolar Disorder (Subjects who are found to be stable on medication and receive psychiatric clearance from a mental health professional could be eligible for study participation per the Physician's discretion).

12. Tobacco use: Last used anytime within 1 year, beginning and inclusive of date of study screening per subject report. Should the subject begin smoking during study participation, physician at time of notification in change in smoking status to determine subject's continued participation.

13. Morbid obesity: BMI>than or equal to 40

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Procedure:
Fat Grafting
Grafting of autologous fat tissue is a minimally invasive surgical technique that starts with the harvest of fat tissue from the abdomen or thighs using liposuction through incisions less than 2mm in length. The lipoaspirate is then processed to concentrate the adipose fraction and reinjected into the graft site. This surgical procedure involves the immediate transplantation of a patient's own tissue in a single operative procedure.

Locations

Country Name City State
United States UPMC Plastic Surgery Aesthetic Center Pittsburgh Pennsylvania

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Pittsburgh

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Plantar fascia thickness Assessed by ultrasound 6 months
Secondary Local and systemic complications resulting from fat graft procedure Including infection, fat necrosis, hematoma, seroma 6 months
Secondary Plantar foot pain Assessed by validated foot pain questionnaries 6 months
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT03014739 - Evaluation of Shear Wave Elastography Reproducibility in Achilles Tendons and Plantar Fascia
Completed NCT05452551 - Investigation of Myotonometer Reliability in Evaluation of Plantar Fascia Biomechanical Properties
Completed NCT04637841 - Comparasion of the Immediate Effect of Myofascial Relaxation Technique and Kinesiology Taping N/A