Evaluation of the Functional Outcome of Hero Arm Prosthesis in Children After One Year of Use.
- Conditions
- Abnormality of Upper Lip
- Interventions
- Other: Questionnaires and tests
- Registration Number
- NCT05579002
- Lead Sponsor
- Hopitaux de Saint-Maurice
- Brief Summary
The goal of this observational study is to evaluate the functional impact of using a bionic myoelectric prosthesis (Hero Arm) in children with a transverse forearm agenesis upper limb deformity, after one year of use. The Hero Arm prosthesis is the first bionic myoelectric prosthesis reimbursed in France for children.
The main objective is to Identify the functional difficulties encountered by the child related to the agenesis and which could be improved by wearing this prosthesis.
The investigators will include children born between 2006 and 2012 with a unilateral upper limb malformation. These children are regularly followed at Reference Center for Limb Malformations (CEREFAM) at the Saint-Maurice Hospitals (HSM) for a unilateral upper limb deformity. CEREFAM is currently following a large cohort of children with malformations including 143 children with transverse forearm agenesis. Of these, approximately 10% have been prescribed a Hero Arm prosthesis.
After the delivery of the Hero Arm, they are followed up in occupational therapy at HSM to learn how to use the prosthesis. This training lasts two days with an evaluation (T0). This assessment includes:
* three questionnaires: the Canadian Measure of Occupational Performance (CMOP), a version of the Disabilities of the Arm Shoulder and Hand (DASH) that has been modified to fit the child, and a questionnaire completed by the CEREFAM.
* two analytical and functional tests: the Action Research Arm Test (ARAT) and the modified 400-point assessment.
The same assessment will be performed after one year of wearing the prosthesis (T1).
This is a observational and non-interventional study. No changes have been made to the usual follow-up of the patient.
- Detailed Description
Transverse forearm agenesis (TFA) is a sporadic, non-genetically based, mostly isolated congenital malformation. According to Froster-Iskenius U.G. \& Baird P.A, the incidence of this condition is estimated at 1.7 per 10,000 births. This condition is characterized by a lack of partial or complete development of a limb or limb segment. In transverse forearm agenesis (TFA), the majority of the damage occurs at the proximal-middle third of the limb.
In general, with the French administration, people with TFA are not considered to be disabled. However, this malformation can have a functional impact with limitations in certain activities of daily living and in the practice of specific activities (sports, music...). Socially, some patients present a desire to be "unnoticed", especially during adolescence and early adulthood, when entering professional life, for fear of discrimination in hiring. On the other hand, some patients display their malformation and even make it their "trademark".
Currently, agenesis patients are treated by multidisciplinary teams who propose a prosthesis. The prosthesis is not indispensable, patients live with their malformation since birth and are autonomous in their daily life. There are 3 categories of prostheses: aesthetic prostheses, functional prostheses and tool prostheses.
The Hero Arm prosthesis, belonging to the functional prostheses, is the first and only bionic myoelectric prosthesis reimbursed in France for children by the Social Security since 2019. This prosthesis is designed by 3D printing by Open Bionics in England. It is a prosthesis that has a lower cost than other prostheses available on the market, which is not negligible due to the growth of the child, requiring the change of prosthesis annually. The price of a Hero Arm prosthesis is around 12,000 to 15,000 euros. This prosthesis is a departure from traditional aesthetic prosthesis models and is closer to "superhero" type prostheses. In addition, there is a variety of colors available and the appearance can be customized by the children.
Until now, no study has been done on the functional results of the Hero Arm prosthesis in à pediatric context in France.
This is the first study on the use of a new bionic myoelectric prosthesis in children in France, retrospective, allowing to evaluate the service rendered by the medical device and the impact on the quality of life of these children with congenital amputation of the forearm. This study is based on the patients of the Reference Center for Limb Malformations (CEREFAM).
Beyond the functional aspect, this study will allow to frame the prescription of this prosthesis by analyzing the service rendered for the child and their family.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 10
- Children between 7 and 16 years old
- Children with a unilateral upper limb deformity
- Children with a Hero Arm bionic myoelectric prosthesis, with or without another prosthesis
- Children and parents who speak and understand French
- No objection to data collection
- Children with bilateral upper limb malformation
- Children with cognitive disorders who are not able to learn to use a myoelectric prosthesis
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Children with unilateral upper limb malformation Questionnaires and tests Children born between 2006 and 2012, with a unilateral upper limb deformity. These children are regularly followed at CEREFAM for a unilateral upper limb deformity. During their follow-up, they were fitted with different upper limb prostheses. During a consultation with one of the CEREFAM physicians, they requested a Hero Arm prosthesis following the marketing and reimbursement in France in 2019.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Canadian Occupational Performance Measure (MCRO) / change is being assessed T0 at first use of the prosthesis and T1 at 12 months of use Designed to detect, from the patient's own words, the disturbances in the occupational balance that occur in the areas of personal care, productivity and leisure. This assessment highlights problems and limitations in the child's participation in meaningful activities. The child must rate his or her performance, i.e., his or her perception of his or her ability to perform the activity, as well as his or her satisfaction with this performance.
The child can describe up to 15 problematic items with an estimation on a 10-point ordinal scale (rating) of the importance of the difficulties identified. The examiner, with the child's input, will select the 5 most important difficulties to address. The child will self-assess on a 10-point scale, for each of the selected difficulties, his/her current performance ("I am capable or not") and satisfaction ("I am happy or not"). These are meaningful activities for the child at that age.
This measure assessed change between T0 and T1.Disability of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand (DASH) / change is being assessed T0 at first use of the prosthesis and T1 at 12 months of use It was designed to be a region-specific instrument to measure the patient's perception of symptoms and disabilities associated with any upper extremity or joint disorder. We used it as a global functional assessment of the child, to evaluate what he or she is able to do with or without a prosthesis.
The DASH consists of 30 items that measure: (a) physical abilities (21 items); (b) symptom severity (5 items) and (c) social abilities or roles (4 items). The DASH is scored using a 5-point Likert scale that rates the individual's difficulties in the previous week.
This measure assessed change between T0 and T1Action Research Arm Test (ARAT) / change is being assessed T0 at first use of the prosthesis and T1 at 12 months of use ARAT is a measurement scale for assessing specific changes in limb function in individuals with brain injury (the result being hemiplegia). It assesses the patient's ability to manipulate objects of various sizes, weights, and shapes and can thus be considered a measure of upper extremity-specific activity limitations.
The ARAT is divided into four subscales: Grasping; Grasping; Pinching; and Gross Motor Skills. Each subscale is a hierarchical Guttman scale, which means that each item is given in increasing order of difficulty. In the ARAT, if the patient successfully completes the most difficult item on the subscale, this suggests that he or she will succeed on the easier items on that same subscale. Similarly, failure on any item suggests that the patient will be unable to complete the more difficult items on that subscale.
This measure assessed change between T0 and T1
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method The 400-point balance sheet / change is being assessed T0 at first use of the prosthesis and T1 at 12 months of use This is a functional evaluation of the hand. It proposes an evaluation at 4 levels: motor skills, strength, single-handed grip, bi-manual coordination. Each test is scored out of 100.
A modification of the 400-point assessment, involving the use of tests 3 and 4 only, was carried out at the Percy Army Training Hospital to evaluate upper limb prostheses after traumatic amputation.
This modified version of the 400-point assessment therefore includes two parts instead of the four in the unmodified version:
Test 3: Evaluation of single-handed grasping and moving of objects. This is a timed test, where each hand will be timed.
Test 4: Evaluation of two-handed coordination. Non-timed test
This measure assessed change between T0 and T1Analytical Questionnaire / change is being assessed T0 at first use of the prosthesis and T1 at 12 months of use Analytical questionnaire realized by the team of the CEREFAM of Saint Maurice.
It is divided into 6 parts:
1. history of the use of à prostheses and reasons for stopping using prostheses in the past
2. assesses the child's current use of the Hero Arm prosthesis
3. Evaluates 5 criteria for Hero Arm satisfaction (aesthetics, fluidity of movement, maintenance, use, battery)
4. assesses 9 Hero Arm disadvantage criteria (failure, battery position discomfort, weight tolerance, dressing discomfort, pain in use, skin damage and discomfort, sweat tolerance, and noise).
5. Evaluate how the children feel about the prosthesis with an emotion scale
6. The sixth part includes 4 open questions
This measure assessed change between T0 and T1
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Hôpitaux de Saint-Maurice
🇫🇷Saint-Maurice, Ile De France, France