Sacroiliac Joint Somatic Dysfunction Clinical Trial
Official title:
Randomized Controlled Trial Of Minimally Invasive Sacroiliac Joint Fusion Compared To Radiofrequency Ablation For Sacroiliac Joint Dysfunction
Patients diagnosed with chronic SIJ pain that can be treated by sacroiliac joint fusion or radiofrequency ablation. The radio frequency ablation is performed using either conventional or "cooled" techniques aimed at the S1-S3 lateral branches and the L5 dorsal ramus. Minimally invasive sacroiliac joint consists of implanting 2 to 3 metallic implants inside the SIJ to increase the stability and eventually fuse the SIJ. This randomized controlled trial aims at comparing treatment success at 6-month follow-up time-point after minimally invasive sacroiliac joint fusion and radiofrequency ablation for chronic SIJ dysfunction.
Introduction This document is a protocol for a human research study. This study is to be
conducted according to US and international standards of Good Clinical Practice (FDA Title 21
part 312 and International Conference on Harmonization guidelines), applicable government
regulations and Institutional research policies and procedures.
Background
Sacroiliac joint (SIJ) dysfunction is a common pain condition involving the buttock and may
irradiate in the low back, groin and/or lower extremity. About one in five patients with low
back pain is estimated to have SI joint pain. The economic burden of SIJ pain is high in the
United States and there is a need for more cost effective treatment options. There is a lack
of relevant high quality studies that compared nonsurgical and surgical treatment for SI
joint dysfunction.
Sacroiliac joint (SIJ) dysfunction has been estimated to be the origin of lower back pain in
13 to 30% of patients. SIJ pain is usually referred to the buttock, low back, groin and/or
lower extremity. SIJ osteoarthritis, trauma, SIJ degeneration following lumbar fusion and
postpartum SIJ dysfunction are common causes of SIJ pain found in a clinical setting. Other
less common causes for SIJ pain include inflammatory sacroiliitis, infective sacroiliitis,
insufficiency stress fractures and neoplasia.
Diagnostic evidences for SIJ dysfunction
The presenting symptoms of SIJ dysfunction can be similar to those of other spinal conditions
such as disc herniation or degenerative spinal stenosis. Unlike radiculopathy, there is often
an absence of specific radiological finding with SIJ dysfunction. A gold standard for SI
joint pain diagnosis does not exist, but dual comparative local anesthetic joint blocks with
at least 70% pain relief are considered a validated diagnostic test for SI joint pain.
Reproducibility of SIJ pain with at least 3 SIJ-selective stressing tests, including the
thigh trust, compression, Patrick's, distraction and Gaenslen's test, is also considered
having good diagnostic validity.
Investigational Agents and Preclinical Data
Nonsurgical treatment efficacy for SIJ dysfunction
Sacroiliac dysfunction is thought to be secondary to a loss of SIJ stability caused by either
deficient form closure (joint anatomy) or force closure (compressive forces exerted by
neuromuscular and ligamentous structures around the joint. Physical therapy can improve SI
joint pain by increasing force closure. Pelvic stabilization, strengthening and self-bracing
exercises have been showed to improve force closure and may provide SIJ pain relief.
When SIJ pain fails to improve with physical therapy, several pain management interventions
can be offered to patients. Up to now, the level of evidence for SIJ intraarticular or
periarticular steroid injections is mainly limited to short-term outcome (3 months) and the
effectiveness results are conflicting between different studies.
Compared to conventional radio frequency ablation, the effectiveness of cooled radiofrequency
ablation is supported by superior level of evidence. Two randomized controlled trials
comparing cooled radio frequency ablation vs placebo demonstrated a success rate varying
between 38 to 57% at 6 months for cooled radiofrequency ablation. Observational studies also
demonstrated success rate varying from 40% to 71% at 6 months for both conventional and
cooled radio frequency ablation. The effectiveness of conventional and cooled radio frequency
ablation at 9 and 12 months are more limited and some studies did report loss of
effectiveness at 12 months. Based on the available data, there is no evidence supporting
clinical superiority between traditional and cool radio frequency ablation. A retrospective
study on 88 patients revealed comparable effectiveness between conventional and cool radio
frequency ablation with > 50% pain reduction in the majority of patients after 3 and 6
months.
Surgical treatment evidence for SIJ dysfunction
Minimally invasive SIJ fusion is a surgical treatment aimed at stabilizing the SIJ to reduce
pain, disability and improve quality of life. In a recent randomized controlled trial called
Investigation of Sacroiliac Fusion Treatment (INSITE), minimally invasive SIJ fusion, using
triangular titanium implants (iFuse Implant System, SI-BONE®, San Jose, CA), has been shown
superior to non-surgical treatments in managing SIJ dysfunction at 6 months (81.4% vs 26.1%
success rate) and the results in the surgical group were sustained at one year and two years
of follow-up. In this trial, success rate was defined as a decreased in SIJ pain Visual
Analogue Score of at least 20 mm compared to baseline, an absence of device-related serious
adverse events, an absence of neurological worsening and no surgical reintervention. There
were 101 subjects in the SIJ fusion group who completed the 6 months follow-up.
Clinical Data to Date The INSITE study is the first and only published Level 1 randomized
controlled trial to have compared SIJ fusion with nonsurgical treatment. Although this study
demonstrated prolonged improvement in pain, disability and quality of life with SIJ fusion,
superiority of SIJ fusion compared to nonsurgical treatment at 6 months cannot be
generalized. This superiority trial may not have been truly clinically relevant because there
was no specific treatment protocol used in the nonsurgical group for each subject.
Nonsurgical management consisted of physical therapy in 98%, at least one steroid injection
in 74%, 2 steroid injections in 4% and radiofrequency ablation of the sacral nerve root
lateral branches in 46% of the 46 subjects assigned to nonsurgical treatment. The different
proportions of treatment offered in the nonsurgical group may in fact differ from other pain
management clinical practices and the generalizability of the results is questionable.
Compared to all nonsurgical treatment available for SIJ pain, the effectiveness of
radiofrequency ablation is supported by literature of higher level of evidence. Prolonged
therapeutic effect up to 6 months after the procedure has been demonstrated for
radiofrequency ablation. In the INSITE study, only 21 subjects received radio frequency
ablation, a group size that corresponds to only 21% of the number of subjects studied for SIJ
fusion. This may explain why the nonsurgical group only had 26.1% success rate in this trial.
The quality of evidence for the INSITE study may also be contested as the study sponsor,
SI-BONE®, participated in the manuscript redaction and performed the statistical analysis.
The costs of nonsurgical treatments for SIJ pain are substantial in the United Sates medicare
population and there is a need to assess the best cost effective therapy for SI joint pain.
SIJ fusion and RFN are two SIJ pain treatment modalities that have been studied with a higher
level of evidence compared to other modalities, showing significant effectiveness lasting
more than 6 months after each procedure. However the effectiveness and costs associated with
these two different treatments have never been compared in a clinically relevant randomized
trial.
Dose Rationale and Risk/Benefits
RISKS
General / Unforeseeable
The risks of receiving a SIJ fusion include but are not limited to:
- post-operative incisional pain or worsened pain due to muscle spams
- hematoma and/or surgical site infection (less likely)
- nerve damage that can cause paralysis, loss of sensation or pain (unlikely
- possible second intervention for revision or withdrawal of implants (unlikely)
The risks of receiving SIJ radiofrequency ablation include but are not limited to:
- Pain or discomfort around the area treated
- numbness of skin covering the area treated, worsened pain due to muscle spasm,
- permanent nerve pain (less likely)
- allergies or reactions to medications, infection and/or hematoma (less likely) 3rd
degree burn (rare)
- Nerve damage due to trauma (rare)
Other risks that are not specifically related to SIJ fusion or SIJ radiofrequency ablation
but may occur during any procedure include:
- cardiovascular and /or cerebrovascular events
- cardiac arrhythmia
- deep vein thrombosis
- pulmonary emboli
- pneumonia
- urinary tract infection
- skin abrasions
- coma or death
Radiation Risks
Fluoroscopy is an imaging technique that uses X-rays during the SIJ fusion or SIJ
radiofrequency ablation. This form or ionizing radiation poses a potential for increasing the
patient's risk of radiation-induced cancer. Radiations doses and exposure during the study
are the same that would be used if the subjects were receiving the treatment outside of this
study. Therefore, this study does not involve any additional radiation risk for the subjects.
Study Objectives
Primary objective: Determine clinical superiority between minimally invasive SIJ fusion and
radiofrequency ablation in chronic SIJ dysfunction patients
Secondary Objectives: Compare cost-effectiveness between treatment groups
Study Design
General Design
- Randomized controlled trial where randomization is done by a random number generator.
Even numbers will be directed to the SI joint procedure group and odd numbers will be
directed to the radiofrequency ablation procedure.
- The enrolment uses a 1:1 ratio of SIJ fusion to radio frequency ablation
- The subjects and investigators are not blinded to treatment allocation
Subjects will have a detailed medical history and will complete these questionnaires
- SIJ pain rating using the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS)
- Oswestry Disability Index (ODI)
- Short Form-36 (SF-36)
All subjects will be evaluated at randomization and at follow-up visits scheduled at 1, 3, 6,
9, and 12 months.
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