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Discitis clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04749082 Not yet recruiting - Spondylodiscitis Clinical Trials

Follow up Patients With Thoracolumbar Spondylodiscitis Surgically Treated by Posterior Approach

Start date: January 31, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

To evaluate the long term outcomes of patients with thoracolumbar spondylodiscitis treated surgically by posterior approach. Outcomes include bony fusion, neurological improvement, pain improvement, implant related complication, recurrence of infection and or reoperation rate

NCT ID: NCT04436328 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Surgical Procedure, Unspecified

Conservative Versus Surgical Treatment of Native Vertebral Osteomyelitis

Start date: July 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The optimal treatment of uncomplicated native vertebral osteomyelitis (NVO) is unknown. While some authors recommend surgical treatment (consisting of spinal debridement, decompression and instrumentation using hardware implantation of hardware), others recommend conservative treatment (with antimicrobial therapy alone). In the proposed randomized controlled multicentric trial, we plan to compare the outcome of conservative vs, surgical treatment of NVO regarding (i) infection outcome (i.e. infection-free proportion of subjects), (ii) functional outcome (pain intensity, spine scores, general mobility, quality of life evaluation), and (iii) socioeconomic impact (direct and indirect costs due to NVO). A total of 350 subjects will be screened, 300 subjects will be randomized 1:1 into 2 arms: experimental (surgical treatment) and control (conservative treatment). Subjects in both groups will receive pathogen-directed antimicrobial therapy for 6 weeks. Excluded will be patients with acute neurologic impairment, extensive bone destruction, epidural/intraspinal abscess and with spinal hardware. The clinical impact of this study is enormous since it will generate evidence for rational treatment guidelines. We hypothesize that the conservative treatment of uncomplicated NVO is non-inferior to surgical therapy regarding infection outcome. If the conservative treatment of NVO demonstrate non-inferiority, patients may benefit from avoiding unnecessary surgical intervention.