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A Study to Compare Two Different Managements After Ankle Surgery: Immediate and Delayed Weight-bearing.

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Lateral Malleolus Fracture
Interventions
Other: delayed weight-bearing for 6 weeks after surgery
Other: immediate post-operative complete weight-bearing after surgery
Registration Number
NCT04429217
Lead Sponsor
Ente Ospedaliero Cantonale, Bellinzona
Brief Summary

The investigators will compare two types of rehabilitation in patients who undergo a surgery for treatment of malleolar fractures: immediate complete weight-bearing and delayed weight-bearing.

The investigators want to evaluate if the immediate complete weight-bearing can improve and hasten the functional outcome of the ankle without increasing the risk of complications.

Detailed Description

The study population corresponds to the patients who may benefit from a post-operative rehabilitation protocol with immediate weight-bearing. Eligible lateral malleolar fractures are limited to Weber A and Weber B fractures, since they have a higher stability, after open reduction and internal fixation, compared to Weber C and Maisonneuve fractures. This higher stability gives the possibility to evaluate the benefit of the immediate weight-bearing protocol without safety concerns.

A power analysis was performed to estimate the required sample size to detect a significant difference in the OMAS score at 6 weeks between groups: the number of patients needed is 42 patients per group (84 patients overall) but, considering the risk of drop-outs, the investigators plan to enroll 20% more patients for a total of 100 patients.

The surgical operation will be carried out following the AO Foundation general and specific rules concerning the surgical treatment of malleolar fractures . In particular,an anatomical open reduction and internal fixation with one or two compression screws sustained by a neutralization third-tubular plate for simple fractures or a bridging third-tubular locking compression plate for multi-fragmentary fractures will be performed.

Postoperatively, patients who still meet the eligibility criteria will be randomized in 2 groups: immediate post-operative complete weight-bearing and complete weight-bearing delayed for 6 weeks.Immediate complete weight-bearing consists in the possibility to undergo all the everyday activities without limiting weight-bearing and without the use of walking aids (patients will wear an ankle brace, this will ensure the safety of the early recovery phases, protecting from dangerous movements while allowing the mobilization in the healthy range of movement). Delayed weight-bearing consists in the limitation of the weight-bearing to 20-30% of patient's total weight using crutches for the first 6 weeks after surgery (also patients of the control group will wear the ankle brace).

Subsequent follow-up visits are scheduled at 2, 6, 12 and 24 weeks after surgery. Patients with a fracture non-union radiologically confirmed at week 24 will be followed up until 48 weeks after surgery. Clinical assessments will be performed using subjective, objective and radiological evaluations. Safety will be monitored throughout the study.

Overall study duration will be 2 years and 6 months (2 years to reach the expected sample size and 6 months to complete the follow-up):

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
100
Inclusion Criteria
  • Male and female adults
  • Age ranging from 18 to 70 years, included
  • Signed Informed Consent
  • Ankle fracture requiring surgical management classified as:1- Weber A fracture pattern (AO 44.A1, 44.A2, 44.A3) with or without association with a medial or posterior lesion/fracture or 2- Weber B fracture pattern (AO 44.B1, 44.B2, 44.B3) with or without association with a medial or posterior lesion/fracture
  • Willingness and ability to participate in the trial
Exclusion Criteria
  • Weber C fracture pattern
  • Bilateral fractures or fractures in other locations
  • Maissoneauve associated lesion
  • Body Mass Index < 18.5 and ≥ 30
  • Metabolic diseases influencing fracture healing processes
  • Medical comorbidities precluding operative intervention
  • Inability to follow the procedures of the study, e.g. due to language problems, psychological disorders, dementia, general physical problem of the participant, etc.
  • Inability or contraindications to undergo the investigated intervention
  • Other clinically significant concomitant disease states (e.g., renal failure, hepatic dysfunction, cardiovascular disease, etc.)
  • Pregnant women

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Arm-Bdelayed weight-bearing for 6 weeks after surgerycontrol post-operative rehabilitation intervention consisting in delayed weight-bearing
Arm-Aimmediate post-operative complete weight-bearing after surgeryexperimental post-operative rehabilitation intervention consisting in immediate weight-bearing
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
change from day 1 after surgery in subjective functional ankle recovery on the Olerud-Molander Ankle Score at week 6baseline and week 6

Functional ankle recovery is measured using the Olerud-Molander Ankle Score (OMAS)- The OMAS is a validated, self-administered patient questionnaire designed to subjectively evaluate ankle function after fracture. The scale is an ordinal functional rating scale based on nine different items given different points.

The total score is calculated as the sum of each rated item and range from 0 points (totally impaired function) to 100 points (completely unimpaired function). The OMAS questionnaire will be administered after surgery (visit 1, day 1) and at week 6 (visit 3).

A negative change from the day of surgery to week 6 will indicate an improvement in OMAS score and, therefore, in functional ankle recovery.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change form baseline in pain on the Numerical Rating Scale (NRS)baseline, 12 and 24 weeks

measured by using a Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) at 12 and 24 weeks postoperatively.

The pain NRS is a self-assessment scale in which patients rate their pain on an 11-point numerical scale. The scale is composed of 0 (no pain at all) to 10 (worst imaginable pain). The pain NRS will be administered after surgery (visit 1, day 1) and at 12 (visit 4) and 24 (visit 5).

A negative change from the day of surgery to week 12 or 24 will indicate an improvement in pain NRS score and, therefore, in local pain.

change in subjective functional ankle recovery on the Olerud-Molander Ankle Score during the first 24 weeks after surgerybaseline, week2, week 12 and week 24

measured using the OMAS score at 2, 12 and 24 weeks postoperatively. measured using the Olerud-Molander Ankle Score (OMAS)- The OMAS is a validated, self-administered patient questionnaire designed to subjectively evaluate ankle function after fracture. The scale is an ordinal functional rating scale based on nine different items given different points.

The total score is calculated as the sum of each rated item and range from 0 points (totally impaired function) to 100 points (completely unimpaired function). The OMAS questionnaire will be administered after surgery (visit 1, day 1) and at week 2 (visit 2), 12 (visit 4) and 24 (visit 5). A negative change from the day of surgery to week 2, 12 or 24 will indicate an improvement in OMAS score and, therefore, in functional ankle recovery.

Objective ankle functional recovery6, 12, 24 weeks

evaluated through gait analysis by using the OptoGait® at 6, 12, 24 weeks postoperatively.

The OptoGait® is an avant-garde laser and video technology that permits to quantitatively measure through a sophisticated software the symmetry of the steps, the weight-bearing area, the time of foot-rest on the ground and other parameters. The change of each of this parameter will be evaluated at week 6 (visit 3), 12 (visit 4), 24 (visit 5) to assess the ankle functional recovery during the rehabilitation intervention.

Return to previous daily activities on the Tegner activity level scaleweek 12 and week 24

evaluated by using the Tegner score at 12 and 24 weeks postoperatively. The Tegner activity level scale is a patient-administered rating system designed to provide a standardized method of grading work and sporting activities. It consists of a graduated list of activities of daily living, recreation, and competitive sports. The patient is asked to select the level of participation that best describes their current level of activity and that before injury. The score varies from 0 that represents sick leave or disability pension because of ankle problems to 10 that corresponds to participation in national and international elite competitive sports.

The Tegner activity level scale questionnaire will be administered at week 12 (visit 4) and 24 (visit 5).

A positive change from score before injury to post-operative score will indicate an improvement in Tegner activity level scale score and, therefore, a higher level of activity and return to previous daily activity.

Change form day of surgery in functional ankle disability on the Foot and Ankle Disability Index (FADI) during the first 24 weeks after surgerybaseline, 2, 6, 12 and 24 weeks

measured using the Foot and Ankle Disability Index (FADI) at 2, 6, 12 and 24 weeks postoperatively.

FADI is designed to assess functional limitations related to foot and ankle conditions. FADI consists of 4 pain-related and 22 activity-related items) for a total of 26.

Each of the 22 activity-related items is scored on a 5-point Likert scale from 0 (unable to do) to 4 (no difficulty at all). The 4 pain-items are scored from 0 (none) to 4 (unbearable). The total FADI score is calculated as percentages, with 100% representing no ankle dysfunction.

The FADI questionnaire will be administered after surgery (visit 1, day 1) and at week 2, (visit 2), 6 (visit 3), 12 (visit 4) and 24 (visit 5).

A positive change from the day of surgery to week 2, 6, 12 or 24 will indicate an improvement in FADI score and, therefore, in functional ankle disability.

Daily pain and function12 weeks

monitored through mobile NRS application up to 12 weeks postoperatively. A new application suitable for the use with both Android and iOS running mobile phones was developed by our Institution (EOC- Ente Osedaliero Cantonale) , namely "EOC - EMApp". The application asks the patients two simple questions: to rate actual pain and function on a 0-10 NRS two times daily at random hours in the morning and the evening, as suggested by previous experiences. The following parameters will be calculated and compared between groups: average daily pain and function, mean value of pain and function for each week and for the entire period of assessment (12 weeks). If the patient does not have a smartphone, he/she will not be included it in this assessment group.

Ankle joint flexibility6, 12, 24 weeks

measured through the Ankle Range of Motion (ROM) assessed with a goniometer at 6, 12, 24 weeks postoperatively.

Objective activity level24 weeks

Objective activity level will be continuously documented through a wrist activity tracker measuring daily walking distance up to 24 weeks. The patient will receive the tracker after the surgery and wear it for 24 weeks. The tracker, then, will be returned to the hospital during visit 5.

Radiological assessment24 weeks

Standard X-ray assessment to determine healing, hardware fixation, fracture alignment, fracture reduction, implants mobilization will be performed at week 6 (visit 3), 12 (visit 4), 24 (visit 5). X-ray at 24 weeks will be done only in case of fracture non-union reported at the 12-weeks post-operatively.

change in quality of life on the 36-Item Short Form Health Survey (SF-36 questionnaire).baseline, 2, 6,12 and 24 weeks

measured from the day of surgery (Day 1) to 2, 6, 12 and 24 weeks postoperatively by a using the SF-36 questionnaire.

The SF-36 is a validated, self-administered questionnaire specifically designed for evaluating patient health-related quality of life. It comprises of 36 questions, relating to eight key areas of physical and psychological health, including vitality, physical functioning, bodily pain, general health perceptions, physical role functioning, emotional role functioning, social role functioning, mental health. The weighted-score of each area is transformed into a 0-100 scale, with lower scores indicating the more disability and higher scores the less disability.

A negative change from the day of surgery to week 2, 6, 12 or 24 will indicate an improvement in SF-36 score and, therefore, in quality of life.

Patient satisfaction on the satisfaction Numerical Rating Scale (NRS scale)day of surgery, week 6, 12 and 24

Patient satisfaction will be documented by using 0-10 NRS administered at 6, 12, 24 weeks postoperatively. The satisfaction NRS is a self-assessment scale in which patients rate their satisfaction on an 11-point numerical scale from 0 (completely dissatisfied) to 10 (completely satisfied). The satisfaction NRS will be administered after surgery (visit 1, day 1) and at week 6 (visit 3), 12 (visit 4) and 24 (visit 5).

A positive change from the day of surgery to week 6, 12 or 24 will indicate an improvement in satisfaction NRS score and, therefore, in patient satisfaction.

Pain drug consumption24 weeks

Pain drug consumption will be assessed by recording in a patient diary type and dosage of pain drugs, and reason for taking the drug from surgery (day 1, visit 1) up to 24 weeks (visit 5) postoperatively.

Drug consumption will be quantified in milligrams of active principle taken per week and in number of days in which the patient required a pain drugs during the study period.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Ente Ospedaliero Cantonale

🇨🇭

Lugano, Switzerland

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