Adhesive Capsulitis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Adhesive Capsulitis: Prospective Analysis of Efficacy and Financial Impact for Use of Physical Therapy in Treatment
The purpose of this study is to identify individuals 18 or older who have diagnostic presentation of adhesive capsulitis and randomize them into two arms, distinguished by use of physical therapy and steroid injections compared with steroid injections followed by watchful waiting. This prospective study will be used to determine whether there is a significant impact on patient outcome and whether the additional financial burden is justified. There are no experimental interventions for this study. The use of physical therapy, oral and parenteral corticosteroids, and watchful waiting are offered following the standard of care for adhesive capsulitis. Our hypothesis is that patients will not have a significant difference in outcome between the two study arms. One group will undergo regular physical therapy with corticosteroid injections (Arm 1) and the other will have steroid injections during the inflammatory phase only and then be regularly observed (Arm 2). We also hypothesize there will be a significant financial burden associated with the PT arm that is not justified with the possibility of increased symptom reports in that arm.
A. Objectives The purpose of this study is to identify individuals 18 or older who have diagnostic presentation of adhesive capsulitis and randomize them into two arms, distinguished by use of physical therapy and steroid injections compared with steroid injections followed by watchful waiting. This prospective study will be used to determine whether there is a significant impact on patient outcome and whether the additional financial burden is justified. The standard of care calls for initial non-operative therapy consisting of NSAIDs, watchful waiting, and oral and parenteral corticosteroid administration with consideration for operative therapy after 6 months of failed conservative therapy. We would like to enroll patients who are willing to be randomized and postpone operative therapy for a period of up to one year during which we would have scheduled follow up visits at regular intervals. There are no experimental interventions for this study. The use of physical therapy, oral and parenteral corticosteroids, and watchful waiting are offered following the standard of care for adhesive capsulitis. B. Background Adhesive capsulitis, also known as "frozen shoulder" is a common orthopedic condition affecting 2-5% of the general population13. As defined by the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons, it is a self-limiting condition resulting from any inflammatory process about the shoulder in which capsular scar tissue is produced, resulting in pain and limited range of motion. The majority of shoulder function comes from the interactions of the glenohumeral ligament complex, the rotator cuff complex, and the articulating bones. The superior glenohumeral ligament is important in stabilization of the glenohumeral joint in adduction and external rotation. The middle glenohumeral ligament is an important stabilizing structure in the positions of adduction and external rotation and abduction up to 45° in external rotation. The resistance, and therefore tension, of the inferior glenohumeral ligament, which is negligible in positions of neutral adduction and adduction in external rotation, increases in value for angles between 45° and 90°, indicating the important stabilizing function of this ligament in those positions. The rotator cuff is comprised of the tendons of the supraspinatus, infraspinatus, teres minor, and subscapularis muscles1,10. In this disease state, there is a capsular pattern of shoulder dysfunction which is characterized by slight limitation of medial rotation, moderate limitation of passive abduction, and most importantly, severe limitation of lateral rotation. The finding of lateral rotation limitation or capsular pattern of limitation can be diagnostic in the assessment of AC. The rotator cuff is comprised of the subscapularis, biceps, supraspinatus, infraspinatus, and teres minor muscles. The subscapularis muscle may be divided into nine bellies. The muscle acts as the main internal rotator of the shoulder joint and provides support against traumatic posterior dislocation. The supraspinatus is the main abductor of the arm until 30° degrees after which the deltoid muscle takes over. It constitutes the posterior margin of the rotator cuff interval. A fusion between the infraspinatus and teres minor tendons is so common that the latter is sometimes considered the inferior belly of the infraspinatus. Hence, the presence of a separate teres minor tendon should be considered a variation. The infraspinatus acts in oppositions of the subscapularis as the main external rotator of the arm and works in conjunction with teres minor in completing this objective. Teres minor also assists with extension of the arm1,10. Several shoulder scoring systems have been used to measure patient outcomes after surgery and other therapies. These include the The American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons Standardized Shoulder Assessment (ASES), Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand Questionnaire (DASH), and Constant-Murley Shoulder Outcome Score System. In addition, physical exam findings, patient satisfaction, and return to athletics have been used to further delineate outcomes. Our study will use the ASES, the DASH, and the Constant Score System17. Stages - 1. - Freezing (inflammatory): consists of the initial onset of pain and loss of range of motion that can last anywhere between six weeks to nine months7 2. - Frozen: may show an improvement in pain, but a worsening in range of motion and generally lasts from four to six months7 3. - Thawing: consists of a resolution of symptoms with partial or full return of function that can take between six months to two years7 The most commonly affected demographic is adults in their fourth to sixth decade of life with a median onset of 55 years old and a high incidence in women than men. The condition generally presents unilaterally with the non-dominant shoulder more commonly affected and a progression to bilateral presentation within 5 years in 6 to 17% of patients.16,18,22¬ The aim of treatment is bimodal with one aspect being the resolution of pain and the other being improving range of motion. Common treatments include NSAIDs, oral corticosteroids, intra-articular corticosteroid injection with and without anesthetic, as well as intracapsular distention with and without corticosteroids. Corticosteroid injections - A randomized pilot study in 2009 showed that there were clinically significant improvements in all aspects of function and quality of life for those patients undergoing corticosteroid injections, with no statistically significant difference between patients who underwent capsular distension21. The use of injections in the short term has been proven efficacious in the short term in alleviating pain and increasing ROM. The utility of steroids in the long term has been called into question by a 2008 prospective study that showed that the comparison of steroid injections and physical therapy to physical therapy alone yielded no change in end result2. Short wave diathermy and manipulation under anesthesia (MUA) - Uses radio frequency energy to generate heat in tissues, which has an analgesic effect and reduces muscle spasm and joint stiffness. In one study, short-wave diathermy was showed in randomized control trials to improve outcomes compared to general home exercise16,22. Physical therapy - Maitland mobilization physiotherapy was observed in a single case design to provide increased quality of life, but no significant objective changes in functional status15. Another prospective outcome study evaluating patients who underwent non-operative treatments showed simple home exercise programs to positive outcomes even in patients who had had previously failed attempts at resolution through intensive physiotherapy15,20. Watchful waiting - A wait and see approach, which has been shown to improve outcomes over intense physiotherapy in some cases by being favorable in achieving near pain free function within 24 months. Systematic review in 2012 reviewed nineteen databases in the UK for cost efficacy of various interventions made no significant claims as to which interventions were the most economically advantageous proposing a multi-arm trial comparing high quality conservative management, steroid injection, steroid injection in conjunction with capsular distension, capsular release with MUA16. With growing costs of healthcare and the need to cut down on extraneous interventions, the role of physiotherapy as an adjunctive measure should be thoroughly evaluated. While there have not been sufficient studies on the cost effectiveness as the aforementioned review suggested, there was one study that addressed the use of physiotherapy following capsular distension21. The conclusions garnered from the study showed that the use of physiotherapy was not cost effective showing no beneficial advantage in improving pain, function, or quality of life5,15,19. By determining the objective contribution physiotherapy has on the resolution of adhesive capsulitis when compared to operative management, several protocol related inconsistencies can be elaborated upon. The purpose of this study will be to compare and contrast the benefits yielded from the use of adjunctive physiotherapy in patients who undergo conservative management of adhesive capsulitis. This will provide a basis from which to evaluate whether it is an economically effective use of resources. If the impact is found to be negligible in the long term resolution of adhesive capsulitis, this study's results can be used to advocate for alternative therapies that could avoid the cost of innumerable assets. ;
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