Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Withdrawn
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04361266 |
Other study ID # |
STUDY19080165 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Withdrawn |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
August 1, 2022 |
Est. completion date |
November 1, 2023 |
Study information
Verified date |
October 2022 |
Source |
University of Pittsburgh |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The purpose is to assess Rotium, a novel nanoscaffold, impact on healing of a repaired
rotator cuff and compare to a repair without Rotium. Animal (sheep) models have shown both
quicker and more organized healing when Rotium is used, but there are no studies to confirm
these outcomes translate to human population.
Hypothesis: Rotium rotator cuff repairs will heal both quicker and better than traditional
rotator cuff repair techniques.
Description:
Patients indicated for rotator cuff repair surgery will be offered participation within the
study and consented accordingly. A copy of the consent will be provided to the participant. A
preoperative ultrasonographic assessment will occur by Dr. Onishi. A randomization process by
computer program will determine patients who have Rotium augmented repairs, or not. The
patients will not be blinded.
The surgery will be carried out by a single surgeon making all aspects uniform, except if
there is or is not a Rotium patch. The Rotium patch will be implanted in accordance to
standards of handling sterile implants and placed in a manner that is consistent to its FDA
approval. The patch will be furnished by the institution where the surgery is being
performed. Digital photography will document pertinent arthroscopic operative findings per
standard of care.
Participant assessment will commence preoperatively in an outpatient clinic then continue in
postoperative period, occurring at 2, 4, 6 weeks and 3, 6 and 12 month intervals. During each
visit, the participants will be assessed by two clinicians: the principal investigator and a
blinded ultrasonographer.
Preoperative assessment will include obtaining baseline patient reported outcomes (UCLA,
Rowe, Constant, American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons (ASES) score and SANE (Single Alpha
Numeric Evaluation)scores) by paper questionnaire. A medical history will document NSAID use,
cortisone injections about the shoulder, tobacco usage, narcotic medicine consumption, and
pregnancy status. Due to their deleterious effects on healing, all patients will be
instructed to not take NSAIDs in the first 6 weeks postoperative. Noncompliance will be
noted, but not disqualify the participant from study. Smoking cessation will be strongly
encouraged. A shoulder physical examination will be performed; specifically range of motion
assessment in multiple planes (frontal flexion, internal and external rotation at 90 degrees
of abduction and at side), rotator cuff muscle strength testing with the scapula stabilized,
scapula posture observed, and provocative tests for impingement syndrome. Medical records
will be reviewed. This evaluation will be performed by the principal investigator and will
take 45-60 minutes. The participant will undergo a separate diagnostic ultrasonographic
assessment of the rotator cuff tendons by blinded ultrasonographer. This will take 15-30
minutes.
Aftercare of each population will be identical and will include a 6-week period of sling
immobilization, brief perioperative narcotic medicine, and physical therapy. Physical therapy
protocols will be identical. The participants will be treated by a variety of physical
therapists. All physical therapy will occur out of the home at a PT clinic. Additional home
exercises will be furnished and will be independently performed by the participants.
Specifically, at the 2-week postoperative visit a history will be obtained to quantify
narcotic usage, NSAID usage, VAS pain score, and assess for any complications. The surgical
site and sling will be inspected, passive range of motion of the shoulder assessed (frontal
flexion and external rotation at the side), and the examine will exclude any complications.
Physical therapy for shoulder passive range of motion and periscapular strengthening will be
prescribed, home exercise sheet provided, and the abduction portion of the sling will be
discontinued. Shoulder radiographs will be performed. This visit will take 15-30 minutes. In
addition and separate to this,blinded ultrasonographer will perform ultrasound assessment of
the repaired rotator cuff. Vascularity using superb microvascular imaging and standard
ultrasound techniques will assess vascularity and rotator cuff repair integrity. If possible,
elastography will be performed. These images will be stored in de-identified manner within
University of Pittsburgh HIPPA-compliant cloud. This will take 15-30 minutes and may be done
at a separate time.
At the 4-week postoperative visit a history will be obtained to quantify narcotic usage,
NSAID usage, pain score, and assess for any complications. The surgical site and sling will
be inspected, passive range of motion of the shoulder (frontal flexion and external rotation
at the side) assessed, and the examine will exclude any complications. The prior physical
therapy and home exercises will be continued. This visit will take 15-30 minutes. In addition
and separate to this, blinded ultrasonographer will perform ultrasound assessment of the
repaired rotator cuff. This will take 15-30 minutes and may be done at a separate time.
At the 6-week postoperative visit a history will be obtained to quantify narcotic usage,
NSAID usage, pain score, and assess for any complications. The surgical site and sling will
be inspected, passive range of motion of the shoulder (frontal flexion, internal and external
rotation at 90 degrees of abduction and at side) assessed, and the examine will exclude any
complications. The sling will be discontinued and new physical therapy and home exercises
will be provided; therapy will include shoulder passive range of motion and periscapular
strengthening and include rotator cuff strengthening progressing from isometric to concentric
then to eccentric with the pace being determined by a physical therapist, but done in a pain
free manner. Additionally, patient reported outcomes (UCLA, Rowe, Constant, ASES and SANE
scores) will be collected. This visit will take 30-45 minutes. In addition and separate to
this, blinded ultrasonographer will perform ultrasound assessment of the repaired rotator
cuff. This will take 15-30 minutes and may be done at a separate time.
At the 3-, 6- and 12-month postoperative visits a history will be obtained to assess shoulder
functionality/limitations, quantify NSAID usage, pain score, and assess for any
complications. The examination will be similar to the 6-week evaluation, except rotator cuff
specific strength will be assessed similar to the preoperative testing. Necessity of ongoing
physical therapy will be considered and ordered appropriately. Home exercises will be
continued. These visits will take 30-45 minutes. In addition and separate to this, blinded
ultrasonographer will perform ultrasound assessment of the repaired rotator cuff. This will
take 15-30 minutes and may be done at a separate time.