Pes Planovalgus Clinical Trial
Official title:
Structural HATCP Graft vs Tricortical Iliac Crest Autograft in Paediatric Calcaneal Lengthening Osteotomies: Interim Results From a Randomised Controlled Noninferiority Study
The purpose of this study is to determine whether structural calcium ceramic bone graft
substitute (ReproBone™) is non-inferior compared to autologous tricortical iliac crest bone
graft in lateral calcaneal lengthening osteotomies in pediatric patients and reduces
postoperative pain.
To groups of patients (age 5-16) will be compared. One group randomized to autologous bone
graft and the other group randomized to calcium ceramic.
The evaluation will be based on radiostereometric analysis, pedobarography, Patient reported
outcome assessment (Oxford Ankle Foot Questionnaire), and pain (measured by visual analog
scale and numerical range scale).
Study C: HA-β TCP (ReproBone™) vs. autologous tricortical iliac crest bone graft in a
calcaneal lengthening osteotomy in children with pes planovalgus. A clinical randomized
controlled non-inferiority study with 12 months of follow-up.
Purpose. To investigate the clinical and radiographic findings of a calcaneal lengthening
osteotomy by comparing autologous bonegraft and HA-β-TCP graft in a group of children with
hindfoot valgus deformities. The primary outcome measure the stability of the osteotomy
measured by migrations in the x-translation by RSA.
Design. Prospective, randomized controlled non-inferiority study.
Randomization: Children who fulfill the criteria for inclusion together with their
parents/guardian receive information about the project. The patients are randomized to
respectively HA-ß-TCP and iliac crest bone graft.
Surgical procedure: Calcaneal lengthening osteotomy is performed between the anterior and
middle facet of the subtalar joint. The corticalis of the calcaneus is bilaterally cut
through. The planovalgus deformity is corrected and with a graft matching the wedged
osteotomy is inserted. Tantalum balls are inserted into calcaneus on each side of the
osteotomy and in cuboideum. Postoperative pain treatment consist of a tibial nerve catheter
which is used the first 24 hours. Patients in whom graft is harvested from the iliac crest
get local infiltration analgesics accordingly to a standardized procedure. The pain is
registered by the use of a visual analog scale (VAS, NRS, faces scale) a 3, 8 and 12 hours
postoperative. The amounts of used analgesics are registered. The stability of the osteotomy
is assessed by radiostereometric assay (RSA) at the following time points: Baseline
(first/second postoperative day) after 6 weeks, 8 weeks, 6 months and 12 months.
Power and significance: The primary parameter is stability of the osteotomy, measured as
x-translations by the RSA software. We used continuous non-inferiority sample size
calculations. With alpha 0.05 and power 0.9, non-inferiority limit 2 mm and sd 1.5 mm we
estimated the sample size to 10 patients in each group. To secure against drop-out, we plan
to include 15 patients in each group.
For ethical considerations an interim analysis was planned when 10 patients completed 6
months RSA follow-up. Primary outcome was compression of the osteotomy. We used a 99.8%
confidence interval.
;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Completed |
NCT03812822 -
Describing the Effects of Insoles in Children With Increased Femoral Anteversion and Pes Planovalgus
|
N/A |