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Clinical Trial Summary

This is a prospective cohort study with a historical control group involving patients >=50 years-old with an acute (<3 weeks) Anderson & D'Alonzo type II dens fractures identified on cervical spine CT scan. This will be a pilot efficacy trial to compare treatment of odontoid fractures with 8 weeks of treatment with a parathyroid hormone analog (PTH) analog (abaloparatide) + hard collar immobilization in comparison to historical treatment with hard collar immobilization alone.


Clinical Trial Description

Treatment subjects: Patients will be identified and recruited when presenting with acute fracture to our medical center. Under routine care at our center, all cervical spine fractures are evaluated, either in person or via tele-consult for remote sites, by a fellowship trained Orthopedic or Neurosurgical Spine surgeon at the time of injury/hospitalization. If deemed amenable to non-operative treatment, that patient is then referred to the spine fracture clinic for serial clinical and radiographic follow-up. The study will be introduced to the patient by a PI-delegated provider from the study team either during hospitalization or at their first visit to the spine fracture clinic - typically within 2 weeks of injury. Informed consent for this study may thus be obtained at one of two locations: (1) A majority (~75%) of these patients are admitted to the hospital; these patients will be introduced to the study by a PI-delegated provider who is key personnel on the study team, and may be consented while in the hospital. (2) Other patients may be identified and recruited from our Orthopedic Spine Fracture clinic, which is the referral repository for all non-operative spine fractures within our health system. Patients with acute Anderson & D'Alonzo type II dens fractures, +/- C1 ring injury, identified on cervical CT scan, and recommended for non-operative treatment will be recruited for enrollment in the study. Acuity of the fracture will be determined by radiographic appearance, pain, and mechanism. Type II fractures are defined as involving the area of the dens between the inferior aspect of the anterior C1 ring and not extending into the superior articular facets of C2. If a patient consents to participation in the study, baseline labs will be drawn. The study team's endocrinologist will review labs and confirm eligibility for the study. Lab values obtained during the screening process could exclude patients include an elevated PTH or hypercalcemia. Given the medical complexity, there will not be hard cutoff values for the labs but rather eligibility to participate will be left to the clinical judgement of our endocrinology investigator (fellowship-trained endocrinologist who is key personnel on the study). Eligible patients will receive standard treatment of 12(+/-1) weeks of rigid hard collar immobilization, as well as an 8-week course of 80 mcg abaloparatide during this time. Drug will be initiated as soon after the injury as possible, and at the latest 4 weeks from injury which will allow for completion of 8 weeks of drug administration during the period of hard collar immobilization. Teaching on drug administration will be provided for enrolled patients and their caregiver, if applicable, by designated study personnel prior to drug initiation - either while inpatient, or at the outpatient endocrinology clinic visit. Treatment subjects will otherwise receive the routine care that was provided to historical controls in terms of length of hard collar immobilization spine fracture clinic follow-up and radiographic evaluation. Treatment subjects will be followed with weekly phone calls by clinical personnel on the study team for the duration of the 8-week treatment. Study participants will be followed at the spine fracture clinic according to our usual protocol every 4 weeks +/- 1 week (from the date of injury) out to 12 weeks. All patients will self-report neck pain via Visual Analog Scale (Neck VAS) and complete a Neck Disability Index (NDI) physical function questionnaire at each clinic visit. Use of narcotic pain medication will be collected at each clinic visit under routine care. Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) scans will be obtained for all participants to assess baseline bone density. If a patient has had a DEXA scan for routine care within the 12 months prior to consent, that scan will be used as the baseline test and a separate test for research will not be ordered. If needed, baseline DEXA will need to be completed after consent and by time of the 12-week visit. All radiographs for treatment subjects will be obtained as part of routine care. These include AP/Lateral at each of the 4 (+/-1) week and 8 (+/-1) week clinic visits, and Flex/Ext at the 12 (+/-1) week clinic visits. Final (12 +/-1 week) flexion/extension radiographs will be evaluated for translational motion at the fracture site measured at the posterior cortex of the dens and evaluated by the following criteria: None, Minimal (<2 mm), Moderate (2-4 mm), Mobile (>4 mm). A non-contrast cervical spine CT scan at will be obtained for research purposes at the 12 (+/-1) week time point. Final fracture characteristics (angulation, displacement) will be documented based on the 12-week CT scan. Amount of fracture healing will be assessed on CT by a radiologist by the following method: 1 mm coronal and sagittal sections across the fracture will be individually analyzed. The radiologist will reconstruct the CT scan to true orthogonal coronal and sagittal images. Each slice will be analyzed for the width of bridging bone as a percentage of the width of the fracture line. The sum total of the widths of bridging bone, divided by the sum total of the fracture widths will be expressed as a percentage of total healing for that patient. This absolute % of bridging bone will be the primary outcome. Fracture characteristics (obliquity, angulation, displacement, comminution) on the injury CT scan will be documented for later post-hoc analysis. Additionally, we will also compare our study group results to the union rates documented in the existing literature. Control subjects: Our historical control group will be comprised of patients with type II odontoid fractures (defined above) who were previously treated in our spine fracture clinic. Patients will have been injured within the past ten years, and completed 12+/-1 weeks of hard collar immobilization. Potentially eligible historical controls will be identified by database query and chart/radiographs review of patients from the fracture clinic. Identified potential controls who have not previously had a cervical CT under routine care after completion of hard collar treatment will be contacted initially either in person or via letter or email from a provider in the fracture clinic who helps to oversee it, with follow-up (in person or by phone) by designated research personnel. If patients are interested in active study participation by coming in for a study visit, written informed consent will be obtained in person by designated research personnel. Consented active control subjects will then complete a CT scan of the cervical spine for comparison to those from our study group. If flexion-extension cervical x-ray were not obtained 11 or more weeks after initiation of hard collar treatment as part of their routine care, flexion-extension cervical x-ray will be obtained for the study. Additionally, these control subjects will complete VAS Neck and NDI physical function questionnaires. Identified potential control subjects who (a) previously had a cervical CT after completion of hard collar treatment under routine care or (b) were offered but are not interested in active study participation (i.e. do not consent to come in for study visit) will be invited to verbally consent to allow the study team to collect existing information that is available from their treatment for dens fracture in the electronic medical record. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04760782
Study type Interventional
Source University of Vermont
Contact David Lunardini, MD
Phone 802-847-2663
Email david.lunardini@uvmhealth.org
Status Recruiting
Phase Phase 2
Start date May 18, 2022
Completion date March 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT03355703 - Anterior Odontoid Screw Osteosynthesis in Treatment of Type 2 Odontoid Fracture
Active, not recruiting NCT04895644 - The Duration of External Neck Stabilisation (DENS) Trial N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT03788200 - Randomized, Controlled Trial of Posterior C1-2 Fusion Versus Bracing Alone for Treatment of Type II Odontoid Process Fractures in the Elderly N/A
Recruiting NCT02800278 - Characteristics and Outcomes of Odontoid Fragility Fractures in Elderly N/A