Aged Clinical Trial
Official title:
Classification of the Sagittal Profile of the Spine in Asymptomatic Elderly Subjects
Principal aim The main purpose of the study is to describe the distribution of the sagittal
profile in elderly subjects in order to bridge the gap present in this type of screening,
evaluated in the literature for adults only (i.e. 160 subjects considered by Roussouly et al.
in 2005). This classification assigns an integer value from 1 to 4 in relation to the
evaluation of alignment of the lumbar spine and pelvis in the sagittal plane. The population
description is therefore divided into four categories. The extension of this classification
to elderly can provide useful support for the clinical evaluation and the specific treatment
of the elderly patients.
Secondary aims The study aims in addition to evaluate the relation between the spine sagittal
profile and the objective indexes obtained from the assessment of fall-risk and gait cycle
analysis. Accordingly, a subgroup of 40 subjects out of the 160 will be evaluated. This
subgroup will consider the subjects older than or equal to 74 years, where the risk of
falling is most likely to be expected.
Introduction:
The classification of spine sagittal profile can be an essential prediction factor for the
specific prevention and treatment of patient's pathologies. Despite high variability,
sagittal alignment can be accurately measured by radiographic examination and is fully
replicable. To this regard, a classification of the lumbar profile and pelvis in the sagittal
plane was proposed by Roussouly et al. Specifically, four different typologies can be
recognized. These typologies classify the profile of the lumbar curve and are directly
related to the quantification of the pelvic inclination. The study by Roussouly et al.
examined 160 asymptomatic subjects aged between 18 and 45 years and confirmed the high
inter-individual variability of the sagittal profile. Unfortunately, this classification has
not been extended to elderly. In this regard, it has been shown that peculiar changes in the
sagittal profile are particularly evident in aging, such as the advancement of the average
sagittal axis and the tendency to decrease of the degree of lumbar lordosis.
According to that, extending the classification of the spine sagittal alignment in elderly
results of prime importance. Furthermore, extending this classification will also provide
useful information supporting the clinical evaluation and the specific treatment of elderly
patients (e.g. better understanding the association between spine alignment and the
development of degenerative alterations). In addition to this primary objective, this study
aims to assess the relation between postural imbalance (due to alterations of the sagittal
profile) and motor functionality in elderly. A subgroup of the enrolled subjects, equal to
one quarter of the total size, will undergo fall-risk assessment and gait cycle analysis.
This subgroup will account subjects older than or equal to 74 years, where the risk of
falling is more likely to occur. The objective indices obtained from these analyses will be
put in relation with the classification of the spine sagittal profile.
Aims of the study:
The primary aim of this study is to classify the spine sagittal profile in elderly
asymptomatic subjects (older than or equal to 60 years) through the semi-automatic analysis
of low dose radiographic images obtained through a validated radiographic system (EOS Imaging
System, France). The study will evaluate 160 subjects, at least 40 of whom will have an age
greater than or equal to 74 years. According to Roussouly et al., the classification of the
spine alignment will assign an integer value ranging from 1 to 4, in relation to the
evaluation of the lumbar spine and pelvis in the sagittal plane. Secondary aim of the study
will be to investigate the relation between the classification of spine sagittal profile and
the objective indexes characterizing the fall-risk and the gait cycle analysis. This
assessment will take into account the subgroup of 40 subjects aged 74 years or more.
Radiographic examination:
The radiographic examination will be performed with the EOS low-dose X-ray radiation system
by a radiology technician. The examination, which will take about 10 seconds, will allow the
simultaneous acquisition in upright position of two full-body radiographic images, one in the
coronal plane and one in the sagittal plane. The evaluation of the radiographic images will
be performed by an orthopedic physician. Image processing will be performed by a biomedical
engineer through sterEOS proprietary software and will provide the anatomical parameters
needed to classify the sagittal profile.
Assessment of fall-risk:
This evaluation will be performed after the radiographic examination, in the same session.
The fall-risk assessment test will be performed by a biomedical engineer through OAK device
(OAK, Khymeia, Italy). The OAK device integrates two force plates and sensory elastic straps
applied to pelvis and limbs. This test, which takes approximately twenty minutes, accounts
eight consecutive postural equilibrium exercises and provide the automatic detection of
subject's postural parameters. At the end of the test, the fall-risk rating is automatically
assigned.
Gait cycle analysis:
This assessment will be performed in the same session of fall-risk evaluation. The gait cycle
analysis, which takes approximately forty minutes, will be executed by a biomedical engineer.
Adhesive passive reflective markers will be placed on the skin according to a protocol
suitable to characterize the alignment of lower limbs and trunk. The markers trajectories
during walk will be recorded by an eight cameras optoelectronic system (BTS smart-D, Italy).
A force platform (Kistler, Switzerland) placed in the middle of the pathway will detect the
forces exchanged with the ground. The data analysis will provide the kinematic and kinetic
descriptive parameters of gait cycle.
Statistical analysis:
The total sample size was chosen considering the classificatory purpose of the present study
and its descriptive and non-comparative intent. It was therefore considered as appropriate to
match the number of 160 subjects evaluated in previous study to classify the spine sagittal
alignment in adult subjects. Concerning the secondary aim of the study, the correlation
between the Roussouly type (identifying the spine sagittal alignment) and the indexes
characterizing fall-risk and gait cycle will be assessed. The significance of the Pearson
correlation coefficient or of Spearman correlation coefficient, in case of non-Gaussian data,
will be tested according to two-tailed t-test or permutation distribution test, respectively.
Statistical significance will be considered at p <0.05 level. To this regard, the sample size
requested to guarantee the significance (with α = 0.05 and statistical power = 95%) of a
correlation value defined as 'strong' (not less than 0.6, in absolute value), is equal to 30.
The number of 40 subjects planned for the secondary aim thus fulfills the requirements for
the correlation analysis.
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