Helping Osteoarthritis Patients to Walk With NSAID
- Conditions
- Osteoarthritis, KneeOsteoarthritis, HipChronic Pain
- Interventions
- Drug: therapeutic program including intermittent drug intake and multimodal rehabilitation program
- Registration Number
- NCT05761015
- Lead Sponsor
- University Hospital, Clermont-Ferrand
- Brief Summary
There is a lack of effective analgesic treatments to help walking patients with painful hip/knee osteoarthritis. Our team therefore imagined a new strategy lying on a multimodal rehabilitation walking program with the help of a transient intake of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID). NSAIDs are indeed known to act specifically on pain at movement, but their continuous intake would induce unacceptable side effects. To optimize the benefit/risk balance, the molecule to be chosen must fit to the patient's profile, and its intake should cover only the period of interest, i.e. planned walks. Our multimodal rehabilitation program will also include physical techniques such as appropriate footwear, a patient's education aiming at reducing fear/avoidance and spotting side effects of NSAIDs, and a prescription frame to avoid any overdosing.
This clinical study is a single-center, non-randomized, open label, one-arm trial, using drugs prescribed according to their label (i.e. osteoarthritis pain), pending a reinforced monitoring of side effects.
The primary endpoint is to evaluate efficacy and tolerance of a tailored and transient administration of NSAID within a rehabilitation walking program in patients with painful hip/knee osteoarthritis.
Secondary endpoints are to evaluate the adherence to the program and the factors influencing adherence; to identify the less well tolerated conditions of treatment (one condition being one molecule for one patient profile); to identify the factors of success among a set of baseline demographic, morphometric and psychometric variables; and to study the role of central sensitization (assessed by temporal summation) on the efficacy of treatment.
- Detailed Description
Study schedule:
* Inclusion visit (V0): check of the eligibility criteria, explanation of the protocol, plan for a podiatric consultation, baseline questionnaires, and delivery of diary to collect efficacy outcomes.
* Observation time (4 weeks): baseline measurement of efficacy outcomes (physical activity and pain at walk), podiatric consultation and improvement of footwear (including orthosis or soles).
* Pre-intervention visit (V1) : collection of self-reported outcomes, measurement of temporal summation, 6-min walk test before and after NSAID test \*, plan for the first 6-week intervention period and delivery of diary to collect efficacy and tolerance outcomes.
* Intermediate within-intervention visit (after 6 weeks): collection of self-reported outcomes, blood sampling (biological tolerance outcomes), plan for the second 6-week intervention period and delivery of diary to collect efficacy and tolerance outcomes.
* End-of-study visit: collection of self-reported outcomes, blood sampling (biological tolerance outcomes), and collection of last efficacy outcomes (anxiety, depression, kinesiophobia, global impression of change).
* The patient will undergo two 6-min walk tests at the pre-intervention visit, one before and one 45 min. after oral administration of the NSAID. The patient will be considered as responsive to the NSAID if one of the following criteria occurs: a 15% increase (or more) of the time-to-first pain at walk, self-defined as bothering; a 1-point decrease (or more) of pain intensity (out of 10) throughout the test; or a 15% increase (or more) of the walked distance, if this was \< 200 m at the first test. Only patients responsive to the NSAID will continue the trial.
The sequence of successes will be treated in Bayesian analyses. Sequential analyses with be conducted stepwise. At each step, the decision to stop or to keep going will be taken, until a maximum of 50 cases eligible for analysis.
* 1st step (N=20): stop for efficacy if more than 11 successes; stop for non-efficacy if less than 6 successes; continuation otherwise (20 supplementary patients);
* 2nd step (N=40): stop for efficacy if more than 17 successes; stop for non-efficacy if less than 16 successes; continuation otherwise (20 supplementary patients);
* 3rd step (N=50): efficacy if more than 21 successes; non-efficacy otherwise
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 55
- Uni- or bilateral hip or knee idiopathic osteoarthrosis (ACR criteria, Kellgren-Lawrence grade 2 or more on recent X-ray), responsible for pain since 3 at least months, and pain at walking which intensity is at least 4/10 on a numerical rating scale.
- Less than 3 relevant walks (at least 20 minutes or 1000 km) a week.
- Ability to understand and to follow the protocol, and to answer the questionnaires
- Pregnancy or breastfeeding
- Legal protection
- Body weight < 40 kg or underweight
- Body weight >120 kg or obesity
- Unability to walk, or unability to walk without support devices (sticks, crutches, orthoses and knee pads are allowed)
- Secondary osteoarthrosis (rheumatism, septic arthritis, recent osteonecrosis, hemochromatosis, gout, acromegalia...).
- Concomitant general bone disease (Paget, Reiter...).
- Concomitant and relevant painful disease else than due to osteoarthrosis (e.g. neuropathic pain, fibromyalgia...)
- Previous recent intervention (e.g. surgery, arthroscopy, joint infiltration) expected to relief osteoarthrosis pain throughout the study period.
- Planned intervention similar to those abovementioned, during the study period.
- Recent initiation of any new analgesic treatment (including systemic steroids).
- Planned initiation of any program expected to relief osteoarthrosis pain during the study period, such as physiotherapy, cognitive behavioral therapy...).
- Planned major surgery during the study period.
- Current cancer disease.
- Immunosuppression.
- Autoimmune disease.
- Concomitant topical or systemic NSAID treatment.
- Chronic strong opioid intake.
- Concomitant insulin therapy.
- Any absolute or relevant contraindication to NSAIDs or acetaminophen, according to the French drug agency
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Intervention therapeutic program including intermittent drug intake and multimodal rehabilitation program there is only one intervention arm and no control arm; the Bayesian analysis will be conducted under hypothetical estimates of superiority vs. control.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Success V1 (pre-intervention visit) + 12 weeks success of the therapeutic program (defined by a 30%-increase (or more) of the monthly number of target moves from the baseline observation values, with no treatment discontinuation for NSAID side effects)
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Self-declared physical activity (efficacy outcome) V1 (pre-intervention visit) + 12 weeks Global Physical Activity Questionnaire (GPAQ)
Pain at walk during the two last weeks (efficacy outcome) V1 (pre-intervention visit)+ 12 weeks Visual Analogic Scale VAS (11-point numerical rating scale (from 0 = "no pain" to 10) "the worst pain imaginable")
Actual physical activity (efficacy outcome) V1 (pre-intervention visit) + 12 weeks Number of steps per day assessed by pedometer
kinesiophobia (efficacy outcome) V1 (pre-intervention visit) + 12 weeks Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia (TSK)
level of anxious state (efficacy outcome) V1 (pre-intervention visit) + 12 weeks Hospital Anxiety and Depression scale (HADS)
level of depressive state (efficacy outcome) V1 (pre-intervention visit)+ 12 weeks Hospital Anxiety and Depression scale (HADS)
Patient's Global Impression of Change (efficacy outcome) V1 (pre-intervention visit) + 12 weeks 7-item scale
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
CHU Clemront-Ferrand
🇫🇷Clermont-Ferrand, France