Vertebral Compression Fractures Clinical Trial
Official title:
Vertebroplasty In The Treatment Of Acute Fracture Trial (The VITTA Trial)
The VITTA trial is a randomized, controlled, single-blinded, cross-over trial comparing
percutaneous vertebroplasty with facet block in patients with acute (<1month) and painful
vertebral compression fractures.
The treatment offered for vertebral compression fractures (VCFs) in the interventional arm of
the trial is vertebroplasty, which will be performed in accordance with the standardized
protocol of the Canadian Association of Radiologists. Patients in the control arm will
receive facet block, where a long-acting local anesthetic agent and corticosteroids are
injected in the spinal articular facets at the affected level.
Vertebroplasty is a procedure used to stabilize broken vertebrae, the bones that form the
spine. This study will evaluate the effectiveness of vertebroplasty for the treatment of
acute vertebral fractures.
The VITTA trial is a randomized, controlled, single-blinded, cross-over trial comparing
percutaneous vertebroplasty with facet block in patients with acute (<1 month) and painful
vertebral compression fractures.
Vertebral compression fractures (VCFs) frequently result in debilitating pain, impaired
functional status and bad quality of life. Percutaneous vertebroplasty (PV) is a treatment
for VCFs originally developed in France in the late 1980s and first performed in America in
the mid-1990s. The procedure involves percutaneous application of bone cement
(polymethylmethacrylate) into collapsed vertebrae.
VCFs are a significant public health problem with approximately 750,000 new fractures
occurring in the United States each year, a number that is projected to rise as the
population ages. In fact, one quarter of adults over the age of 50 will suffer at least one
VCF in their lifetime. VCFs cause short term and occasionally long-term pain and disability,
and although not immediately life threatening, they are associated with long term mortality.
Before the advent of PV, the treatment for VCFs was limited to medical therapy- addressing
the pain associated with the fracture but not the fracture itself thus making VCFs
practically the only skeletal fracture not treated with orthopedic surgery. Since the
introduction of vertebroplasty, over 800 papers, technical notes, and reviews that address
this technique have been published with the overwhelming majority reporting significant pain
relief and advocating the adoption of the procedure into common practice. Unfortunately, most
of these studies had low evidence level and poor scientific design until randomized clinical
trials were published in 2009.
Vertebroplasty for refractory back pain (after a period of conservative management of 1
month) constituted the main indication in the overwhelming majority of studies published so
far. Although those studies have largely suggested that it does not offer significant
improvement in pain or functional status relative to medical therapy or infusion of local
anesthesia after this acute phase, the data remains inconclusive and of poor scientific
quality. The present study proposes a different rationale: the benefits of vertebroplasty may
be occurring in the acute phase (before 1 month) by providing immediate pain relief to the
patient, hence allowing early mobilization and preventing medical complications associated
with bed rest. In other terms, vertebroplasty may be a first line, acute phase treatment. If
the investigators hypothesis holds true, an adequately powered clinical trial may provide
sufficient evidence to change the medical indications for vertebroplasty.
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