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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Active, not recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT05791513
Other study ID # N-20220043
Secondary ID
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date May 10, 2023
Est. completion date April 23, 2025

Study information

Verified date May 2024
Source Aalborg University
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The aim of the stepped-wedge cluster randomised trial is to investigate the effectiveness of using a clinical support tool (The MAP-Knee Tool) in managing adolescents aged 10-19 years with non-traumatic knee pain compared to not using the tool. Six participating hospitals will start to use the tool within 4, 6, or 8 months after recruitment start in a randomised order. We will investigate if using the tool is superior in terms of reducing symptoms compared to not using the tool.


Description:

The trial will be designed as a stepped-wedge cluster randomised superiority trial to be conducted across 6 hospital departments across Denmark. Any orthopaedic or similar hospital department in Denmark to which adolescents suffering from non-traumatic knee pain may be referred is eligible for participation. Any medical doctor or physiotherapist employed at either of the study sites who regularly see adolescents with non-traumatic knee pain will be eligible to participate in the trial. Before crossover occurs at the study site, the adolescents will be treated as usual which is at the discretion of the treating clinician. Based on our current research on the usual care pathway, this will be heterogenous and include advice to wait and see, imaging (most often MRI and x-ray), or a rehabilitation plan for the municipality. After crossing over to using the MAP-Knee Tool, the treating clinician will use the MAP-Knee Tool together with the adolescent. The tool was designed to support the entire consultation from diagnosing the condition (patellofemoral pain, Osgood-Schlatter, Sinding-Larsson-Johansson, growth pain, patellar tendinopathy, or iliotibial band syndrome) to deciding on future management. The MAP-Knee Tool includes four separate components: 1) a tool for diagnosing the most common types of non-traumatic knee pain (SMILE), 2) credible explanations of the aetiology and pathogenesis specific to the diagnosis based on multiple methods with an iterative design, 3) a presentation of prognostic factors based on an individual participant data meta-analysis, and 4) an option grid that presents the users of the tool with pros and cons of commonly used management options based on a systematic literature search of systematic and narrative reviews within non-traumatic adolescent knee pain. An overarching focus of all components was to support shared decision-making and base decisions on all three pillars of evidence-based medicine: patient values, clinical expertise, and relevant research. Therefore, the tool should not provide the users with definitive answers simply based on available evidence. After the initial prototype of the tool including all four components had been made, the investigators performed end-user testing using think-aloud sessions with adolescents suffering from non-traumatic knee pain, adolescents with no history of knee pain, and medical doctors.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Active, not recruiting
Enrollment 110
Est. completion date April 23, 2025
Est. primary completion date July 16, 2024
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 10 Years to 19 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Having been referred to a hospital due to non-traumatic knee pain - Age between 10 and 19 years Exclusion Criteria: - Knee pain with a traumatic origin - Lack of ability to cooperate

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Other:
Using the MAP-Knee Tool
Using the MAP-Knee Tool
Usual practice
The consultation between clinician and adolescent is conducted as per usual practice.

Locations

Country Name City State
Denmark Aalborg Universitetshospital Aalborg
Denmark Sportsmedicinsk Center Frederikshavn
Denmark Amager-Hvidovre Hospital København
Denmark Bispebjerg Hospital København
Denmark Næstved Sygehus Næstved
Denmark Vejle Sygehus Vejle

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Aalborg University

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Denmark, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Other Anterior Knee Pain Youth (AKP-Youth) We will use our newly developed questionnaire as a secondary measure of condition severity. The AKP-Youth contains 23 items that are divided into four overarching domains of impact: symptoms, limitations in physical activity, limitations in social activities, and emotional impact of pain. During baseline and at the 12-week and 52-week follow-ups
Primary KOOS-Child Pain subscale KOOS-Child consists of 39 items divided into five subscales (Pain, Symptoms, Activities of Daily Living, Sport/Recreation, and Quality of Life) that each range from 0 to 100 with 100 being optimum. This questionnaire has been found to have good psychometric properties and is recommended for children and adolescents suffering from knee disorders. During baseline and at the 12-week and 52-week follow-ups
Secondary KOOS-Child Symptoms subscale KOOS-Child consists of 39 items divided into five subscales (Pain, Symptoms, Activities of Daily Living, Sport/Recreation, and Quality of Life) that each range from 0 to 100 with 100 being optimum. This questionnaire has been found to have good psychometric properties and is recommended for children and adolescents suffering from knee disorders. During baseline and at the 12-week and 52-week follow-ups
Secondary KOOS-Child Activities of daily living subscale KOOS-Child consists of 39 items divided into five subscales (Pain, Symptoms, Activities of Daily Living, Sport/Recreation, and Quality of Life) that each range from 0 to 100 with 100 being optimum. This questionnaire has been found to have good psychometric properties and is recommended for children and adolescents suffering from knee disorders. During baseline and at the 12-week and 52-week follow-ups
Secondary KOOS-Child Sport/recreation subscale KOOS-Child consists of 39 items divided into five subscales (Pain, Symptoms, Activities of Daily Living, Sport/Recreation, and Quality of Life) that each range from 0 to 100 with 100 being optimum. This questionnaire has been found to have good psychometric properties and is recommended for children and adolescents suffering from knee disorders. During baseline and at the 12-week and 52-week follow-ups
Secondary KOOS-Child Quality of Life subscale KOOS-Child consists of 39 items divided into five subscales (Pain, Symptoms, Activities of Daily Living, Sport/Recreation, and Quality of Life) that each range from 0 to 100 with 100 being optimum. This questionnaire has been found to have good psychometric properties and is recommended for children and adolescents suffering from knee disorders. During baseline and at the 12-week and 52-week follow-ups
Secondary EQ-5D-Y Health-related quality of life will be estimated by the EQ-5D-Youth questionnaire which is an adapted version of the EQ-5D used in an adult population, yet, it still consists of the same five subscales which are mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain and discomfort, and anxiety and depression. During baseline and at the 12-week and 52-week follow-ups
Secondary Global Rating of Change This will be used to measure the participants' self-reported recovery on a 7-point Likert scale ranging from "much improved" to "much worse". Participants are categorised as improved if they rate themselves as "much improved" or "improved" (category 6-7) and categorised as not improved if they rate themselves from "slightly improved" to "much worse" (category 1-5). At the 12-week and 52-week follow-ups
Secondary International Physical Activity Questionnaire short version (IPAQ). The IPAQ is the most used questionnaire for measuring physical activity and consists of 9 items that provide information on the time spent performing vigorous and moderate activities, the time spent walking, and time spent sedentary during the past week. The IPAQ gives an estimate of the total weekly physical activity measured in MET-minutes per week and total minutes spent sitting. During baseline and at the 12-week and 52-week follow-ups
Secondary Sports participation Change in sports participation will be explored using a questionnaire in which participants are asked about whether they have participated in leisure sports activities, type of sports activities and weekly frequency. During baseline and at the 12-week and 52-week follow-ups
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