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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02419040
Other study ID # KALK-001
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date April 2015
Est. completion date April 2022

Study information

Verified date October 2023
Source Martina Hansen's Hospital
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine whether the combination of removal of the calcification in calcific tendinitis of the shoulder (supraspinatus and/or infraspinatus tendon) by aspiration with a needle and syringe (barbotage) and a corticosteroid injection is more effective than corticosteroid or sham injection alone.


Description:

Barbotage is a sonographically guided percutaneous needle aspiration and lavage of the calcium deposit in calcific tendinitis of the shoulder. Persisting pain in cacific tendinitis is considered to be a consequence of increased tendon volume or changed tendon texture in the area of the calcification which leads to secondary impingement and inflammation. Consequently, removal of the deposit should be a causal treatment measure. Scientific evidence for the efficacy of the barbotage procedure in patients with persistent symptoms from calcific tendinitis is still limited. The cyclic often self-limiting course of the disease, and an anticipated placebo effect, questions about the method's efficacy can only be answered by high-quality randomized studies. In this trial the investigators want to randomize a cohort of patients to (1) Ultrasound guided needling, lavage and subacromial steroid injection, (2) Ultrasound guided subacromial steroid injection or (3) Ultrasound guided lidocain injection (sham). The investigators want to follow the patients over two years with repeated testing with a set of validated outcome measures together with radiologic re-examinations. The investigators want to find out whether the active treatments (1, 2) are more effective than the sham treatment and whether there are differences in outcome between the two active treatments. To increase the generalizability of the investigators' results, the investigators want to perform the study as a multi-centre study.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 220
Est. completion date April 2022
Est. primary completion date April 2022
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 30 Years to 100 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: 1. 30 years or older 2. 3 months or more of shoulder pain 3. Moderate to strong pain localized on the top and/or lateral side of the shoulder, exaggerated by activities above shoulder level 4. Painful arc 5. Positive Hawkin's test and/or Neer's sign for impingement 6. Finding of one or more calcifications =5 mm in size on a standard anteriorposterior radiograph, localized proximally to the greater tubercle, together with a sonographic finding of one or more calcifications =5 mm in size on the short or long axis view, localized in the supraspinatus or infraspinatus tendon 7. Morphological radiographic appearance of Molé type A, B or C12 (appendix 2) A: Dense, homogeneous with well-defined limits B: Dense, fragmented with well-defined limits C: Heterogeneous with poorly defined limits and sometimes with a punctuate appearance 8. Ability to understand written and spoken Norwegian (Swedish/English) 9. Existing signed informed consent and expected cooperation of the patients for the treatment and the follow-up Exclusion criteria: 1. Clinical and radiological signs of a recent spontaneous release of the deposit such as a sudden change in size or density of the deposit on ultrasound together with an acute onset of extreme shoulder pain 2. Clinical signs of shoulder instability, glenohumeral arthritis, AC pathology, inflammatory arthropathy, fibromyalgia, frozen shoulder or cervical radiculopathy 3. Sonographic signs for a rotator cuff tear (full thickness or partial thickness) and of a tear or a dislocation of the long head of the biceps tendon 4. A history of surgical treatment of the relevant shoulder 5. A subacromial injection with a corticosteroid during the last 3 months before inclusion 6. Medical contraindications for any of the invasive procedures 7. One of the following contraindications for the use of Lidocaine 10 mg/ml: Patients with serious hypovolaemia, known cardiac conduction disturbances, epilepsy or porphyrias, patients with known serious dysfunction of the liver or the kidneys. 8. One of the following contraindications for the use of Triamcinolone 20 mg/ml: Patients with systemic infections unless specific anti-infective therapy is employed, patients with a local infection in the area of application, patients recently vaccinated with live vaccines, patients with known diabetes mellitus, renal or cardiac insufficiency, ulcerating colitis, gastric ulcer, psychosis, idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura, or ocular herpes simplex. 9. Concomitant medication with one of the following medicinal products: Anti-arrythmics such as mexiletine or class III antiarrythmics (e.g. amiodarone), muscle relaxants (e.g. suxamethonium) or antipsychotics (e.g. pimozide, sertindole, olanzapine, quetiapine, zotepine, tropisetrone, dolasetron), antibiotics such as quinopristin/dalfopristin. 10. Any history of prior allergic/hypersensitivity reactions related to the study medication 11. Knowledge of an ongoing pregnancy (Fertile women not using contraception and who are uncertain whether they are pregnant or not will have to perform a pregnancy test) 12. Nursing women

Study Design


Intervention

Procedure:
Barbotage
A 18-gauge needle connected to a 5 ml syringe with 4 ml of saline solution will be used to puncture the calcification with freehand technique and under constant sonographic monitoring. With the tip of the needle placed in the center of the deposit, the calcification will be flushed. Finally, a new 21-gauge needle will be introduced into the subacromial-subdeltoid bursa and 9 ml of 1% Lidocain hydrochlorid and 1 ml (20 mg) of Triamcinolon will be injected into the subacromial-subdeltoid bursa. All patients will be instructed by a physioteherapist in home exercises.
Corticosteroid injection
The tip of the 18-gauge needle will be placed in the soft parts outside of the rotator cuff and movements mimicking the lavage procedure will be performed. A lavage procedure usually takes 5 minutes and the same period of time will have to be used for the mimicking maneuver. Finally, a new 21-gauge needle will be introduced into the subacromial-subdeltoid bursa and 9 ml of 1% Lidocain hydrochlorid and 1 ml (20 mg) of Triamcinolon will be injected into the subacromial-subdeltoid bursa. All patients will be instructed by a physioteherapist in home exercises.
Lidocain injection (sham)
The tip of the 18-gauge needle will be placed in the soft parts outside of the rotator cuff and movements mimicking the lavage procedure will be performed. A lavage procedure usually takes 5 minutes and the same period of time will have to be used for the mimicking maneuver. Finally, a new 21-gauge needle will be introduced into the subacromial-subdeltoid bursa and 10 ml of 1% Lidocain hydrochlorid will be injected into the subacromial-subdeltoid bursa. All patients will be instructed by a physioteherapist in home exercises.

Locations

Country Name City State
Norway Martina Hansen's Hospital Sandvika

Sponsors (6)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Martina Hansen's Hospital Haraldsplass Deaconess Hospital, Helse Fonna, Oslo University Hospital, Sykehuset i Vestfold HF, University Hospital, Linkoeping

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Norway, 

References & Publications (3)

Moosmayer S, Ekeberg OM, Hallgren HB, Heier I, Kvalheim S, Blomquist J, Pripp AH, Juel NG, Kjellevold SH, Brox JI; KALK study group. KALK study: ultrasound guided needling and lavage (barbotage) with steroid injection versus sham barbotage with and without steroid injection - protocol for a randomized, double-blinded, controlled, multicenter study. BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2017 Apr 4;18(1):138. doi: 10.1186/s12891-017-1501-9. — View Citation

Moosmayer S, Ekeberg OM, Hallgren HB, Heier I, Kvalheim S, Juel NG, Blomquist J, Pripp AH, Brox JI. Ultrasound guided lavage with corticosteroid injection versus sham lavage with and without corticosteroid injection for calcific tendinopathy of shoulder: — View Citation

Robinson DM, McInnis KC, Rhim HC, Tsitsilianos N. Lavage treatments for calcific rotator cuff tendinopathy. BMJ. 2023 Oct 11;383:p2248. doi: 10.1136/bmj.p2248. No abstract available. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Other Size of calcific deposits Measured in millimeter AP radiographs 4 and 24 months
Other Volume of removed calcific deposit Volume of removed calcific deposit in milliliter Baseline
Primary Oxford Shoulder Score Shoulder pain and disability 4 months
Secondary Oxford Shoulder Score Shoulder pain and disability after 2 and 6 weeks, and 8, 12 and 24 months
Secondary QuickDASH Disability of shoulder, arm and hand Shoulder pain and disability after 2 and 6 weeks, and 4, 8, 12 and 24 months
Secondary EQ 5D-5L Health related quality of life 4, 8, 12 and 24 months
Secondary Cross-over of patients number of patients crossing over to other group or other treatment 4, 8, 12 and 24 months
Secondary Adverse-events Patient reported adverse events 2 and 6 weeks, and 4 months
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