Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Terminated
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT03022656 |
Other study ID # |
Pro00058476 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Terminated |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
January 2017 |
Est. completion date |
October 2023 |
Study information
Verified date |
June 2024 |
Source |
University of Alberta |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Brace treatment is the most effective non-surgical method for the treatment of Adolescent
idiopathic scoliosis (AIS). The goal of bracing is to stop the curve progression during the
high risk period of the adolescent growth spurt. A spinal brace is a hard plastic shell with
pressure pads installed inside the liner to provide mechanical support to the curvature of
the spine. It is a big commitment for adolescents to wear a brace because it is physically
restrictive, uncomfortable and draws unwanted attention. Therefore, it is very important to
make the brace treatment as effective as possible to get patient buy-in to compromise their
lifestyle by wearing a brace. Patients' belief in the treatment outcomes is also a factor to
attain their compliance.
This randomized clinical study will investigate if the effectiveness of brace treatment can
be maximized by combining ultrasound imaging assistance during brace design with the smart
brace to automatically maintain corrective brace pressures at the optimum level during the
whole treatment period.
Description:
Background: Brace treatment is the most effective non-surgical method for the treatment of
AIS. The goal of bracing is to stop the curve progression during the high risk period of the
adolescent growth spurt. A spinal brace is a hard plastic shell with pressure pads installed
inside the liner to provide mechanical support to the curvature of the spine. It is a big
commitment for adolescents to wear a brace because it is physically restrictive,
uncomfortable and draws unwanted attention. Therefore, it is very important to make the brace
treatment as effective as possible to get patient buy-in to compromise their lifestyle by
wearing a brace. Patients' belief in the treatment outcomes is also a factor to attain their
compliance.
Study Objective: This randomized clinical study will investigate if the effectiveness of
brace treatment can be maximized by combining ultrasound imaging assistance during brace
design with the smart brace to automatically maintain corrective brace pressures at the
optimum level during the whole treatment period.
Methodology:
Subject Selection: One hundred and twenty-eight brace candidates with AIS will be recruited
over the next 5 years. During the scoliosis clinic, the attending orthopaedic surgeon
identifies a potential candidate. He will ask the potential patient if he/she is interested
in speaking with the research coordinator about research projects that he/she is eligible.
The inclusion criteria are patients 1) age 10 - 16 years, 2) diagnosis of AIS, 3) require
full-time brace wear, 4) Cobb angle between 20° - 40°, 5) Risser sign ≤3 and 6) premenarchal
or less than 1 year postmenarchal. Subjects will be randomly selected to 1 of the 2 groups:
a) An ultrasound assisted designed brace and a brace monitor, and b) An ultrasound assisted
designed brace and a smart brace device. Figure 1 shows the flow chart of the study. Each
subject will have 50% chance of being in any one of the groups. An extra 15 minutes will be
needed for both groups during the brace fitting clinic to install the brace monitor or smart
brace device. An extra 30 minutes will be added to your casting. Participants will be
monitored until the brace treatment is finished.
Detailed description: The brace monitor is a small electronic device which will be embedded
inside the brace. It is a very low power system operating at 3.3 V and 2 milliampere (mA) (on
average). It is able to store 12 months of data and the battery can last for 9 months. It
will record how much time and how tightly the subject wears the brace. The brace with the
monitor looks exactly the same as a standard brace. The subject won't feel any different and
don't need to do anything beyond. We will replace the monitor with a new one at every
standard follow up clinic.
A smart brace device is a small electronic device. It will have a small air bag embedded at
the major pad area covered with stretchable leather. It will record how much time and how
tightly the brace is worn. The air bag will inflate if the contact pressure between the brace
and the body is lower than expected. The air bag will deflate if the contact pressure between
the brace and the body is higher than expected. This automatic pressure adjustment will only
be activated during daytime which is individualized based on the patient's sleep pattern. The
system will also be activated only if breathing motion is detected (which means brace is
worn). The smart brace monitor is able to store 6 months of data but requiring to recharge
every day for 30 minutes. The smart brace monitor is a low power system (operating at 4.2 V
and 150 mA max). It has an on-off switch and a pressure enable-disable regulation switch
safety functions. Switching enable-disable regulation to off will make the smart brace device
becomes a standard brace monitor. Turing off the on-off switch will disable all the functions
and this brace will become a standard brace. We will replace the monitor with a new one at
every standard follow up clinic.
The ultrasound assisted design requires to get 4 ultrasound images: normal standing, normal
supine, bending left supine and bending right supine. Each scan takes approximately 1 minute.
These 4 scans will provide spine flexibility information. After this, the subject will be
asked to stand in a wooden positioning frame with pressure pads allow to move
3-dimensionally. Multiple adjustable brace pads will be applied to the patients' body
according to orthotist suggestion. An ultrasound scan will be performed after the pads are
applied. The orthotist will use the ultrasound image to decide if the pads are at the optimum
locations and applied proper pressures. If the orthotist is satisfied with the correction,
he/ she will use this setup to build the brace. Otherwise, he/she will adjust the position
and orientation of the pads and repeated the ultrasound scan.