MedPath

Early Rehabilitation After Hip Fracture

Phase 3
Conditions
Accidental Falls
Fractures
Hip Fractures
Registration Number
NCT00133640
Lead Sponsor
Swiss National Science Foundation
Brief Summary

The aim of this study is to compare a low versus high intensity physiotherapy early rehabilitation program combined with a low versus high dose vitamin D early rehabilitation program in a randomized controlled trial among elderly patients with acute hip fracture in an acute care setting. The primary outcome to be compared between treatment arms is the rate of falls during a 12-month follow-up. Secondary outcomes are injurious falls, number of persons who fell, low-trauma fractures (at the hip, forearm, humerus, pelvis, ankle, spine, femur, tibia), disability, quality of life (Euro-Qol), mortality and health care utilization. Another secondary outcome will be admission to nursing home compared between treatment arms among subjects, who are community-dwelling prior to the index hip fracture. Admission to nursing home is the marker of loss of independence for the individual, but also triggers high cost for the society.

The study will provide new early rehabilitation guidelines to allocate health care resources efficiently in the acute care setting. Eventually and most importantly, the study will help improve outcomes in patients with hip fractures.

Detailed Description

Subjects:

The researchers will enroll 204 elderly subjects (men and women) admitted to two large hospital centers with acute hip fracture. Subjects may be institutionalized or community-dwelling prior to admission. To be enrolled in the study subjects need to be 65 years or older. Demented persons, who reach a Folstein Mini Mental Status of less than 15 are excluded.

Design:

Once written informed consent from participants or proxies is given, subjects will be randomly assigned to 4 different program combinations based on a 2X2 factorial design: (1) low dose vitamin D / low intensity physiotherapy; or (2) low dose vitamin D / high intensity physiotherapy; or (3) high dose vitamin D / low intensity physiotherapy; or (4) high dose vitamin D / high intensity physiotherapy. Low dose Vitamin D is 800 IU cholecalciferol per day and high dose vitamin D is 2000 IU cholecalciferol per day.

Subjects will be recruited within 5 days after hip fracture surgery and followed for adverse outcomes over a 12-month period. Dose of vitamin D will be double-blinded.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
204
Inclusion Criteria
  • Age 65 years or older
  • Acute hip fracture admitted to one hospital center
Exclusion Criteria
  • A Folstein Mini Mental Score of less than 15 as an indicator of significant dementia
  • Primary hyperparathyroidism
  • Current cancer with wasting or bone metastases
  • Hyperparathyroidism
  • Sarcoidosis
  • A kidney stone in the past 5 years or significant renal disease (creatinine clearance below 15 ml/min)
  • Hypercalcemia (albumin adjusted) of more than 2.8 mmol/l
  • non-surgical treatment
  • no German language skills
  • severe hearing or visual impairment

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
FACTORIAL
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
rate of falls compared between treatment arms
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
disability
mortality
low-trauma fractures (at the hip, forearm, humerus, pelvis, ankle, spine, femur, tibia)
number of persons who fell
quality of life (Euro-Qol)
health care utilization
rate of injurious falls
admission to nursing home compared between treatment arms among subjects, who are community-dwelling prior to the index hip fracture

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Triemli Hospital

🇨🇭

Zurich, Switzerland

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