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Clinical Trials/NCT02000297
NCT02000297
Unknown
Phase 4

Outcome Comparison of Allogenic Cancellous Bone and a New Synthetic Bone Substitute (geneX®) in Filling the Bone Defect Created With Medial Open Wedge High Tibial Osteotomy

Seoul National University Hospital1 site in 1 country60 target enrollmentOctober 2013

Overview

Phase
Phase 4
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Osteoarthritis, Knee
Sponsor
Seoul National University Hospital
Enrollment
60
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Temporal change of postoperative pain
Last Updated
11 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

This study is conducted to determine whether a new synthetic bone substitute is better than allogenic bone graft for addressing bone defect in medial open wedge high tibial osteotomy in terms of postoperative pain, postoperative bleeding, operation time and bone healing. The investigators hypothesized the new synthetic bone substitute would bring better outcomes in the outcome variables mentioned above.

Detailed Description

High tibial osteotomy is a well-established treatment option for the young patients (aged 40\~55years) with knee osteoarthritis which is confined in medial compartment of the knee. Classical technique was lateral closing wedge osteotomy, but recently medial open wedge osteotomy has gained popularity with the advent of new fixation devices and refined surgical techniques. The surgeon can correct the deformity more precisely in both coronal and sagittal planes simultaneously with medial opening technique. And it can avoid complications associated with lateral closing technique like tibial shaft offset or peroneal nerve palsy. But medial opening technique inevitably creates large bone defect, which has to be addressed to avoid complications like loss of correction or delayed/non-union. Autologous bone is widely accepted as a standard for filling bone defects, but its supply is limited and harvesting autologous bone adds to surgical morbidity like bleeding, pain or fracture at the donor site. Therefore, there has been much effort to find materials to substitute autologous bone. Many studies reported the results of using allogenic bone for addressing bone defects and most of them showed favorable results. But some allogenic bone products are cumbersome to process to make it fit to the defect, and there are potential risk of disease transmission, if the products are not properly treated. Bone cements of several different composition has been developed and when used for filling bone defect, they also showed good results in general. Recently, a new synthetic bone substitute based on calcium phosphate and calcium sulfate (geneX®, Biocomposites Co.,Ltd.) has been introduced and is commercially available. While providing initial mechanical strength, its calcium sulfate component is rapidly absorbed to provide space for new bone ingrowth and its surface is made to negatively charged, which helps accelerate new bone formation. It is provided as an injectable paste, which is easier to handle than allogenic bone, so it may help reduce operation time. With these theoretical advantages, there are some anecdotal reports that patients treated with geneX® presented less postoperative pain and bleeding than patients treated with allogenic bone graft. Therefore, we conducted this study to determine whether the new synthetic bone substitute (geneX®) is better than allogenic bone for addressing bone defect created in medial open wedge high tibial osteotomy.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
October 2013
End Date
January 2016
Last Updated
11 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Tae Kyun Kim

Direcor, Joint reconstruction center, SNUBH

Seoul National University Hospital

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Diagnosis of primary osteoarthritis of the knee which is confined to medial compartment
  • Scheduled for high tibial osteotomy
  • Written signed consent available

Exclusion Criteria

  • Patients who refuse to participate in the study
  • Previous history of major orthopedic surgery around the operating knee
  • Congenital anomaly involving proximal tibia
  • Revision high tibial osteotomy
  • Patients who is receiving another major knee surgery simultaneously with high tibial osteotomy at the same knee

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Temporal change of postoperative pain

Time Frame: from 2 days after surgery to 12 months after surgery

Pain on operation site is measured on a 0-to-10 visual analogue scale(VAS) and 5-point Likert scale (0.no pain, 1.slight pain, 2.moderate pain, 3.severe pain, 4.extreme pain). Initial postoperative pain will be recorded on postoperative day 2. After discharge from hospital (on postoperative day 2, on average), patients will visit outpatient department on 2weeks, 6weeks, 3months, 6months, 12months after surgery and pain measurements on each visit will be recorded.

Secondary Outcomes

  • Temporal change of weight bearing status(from 2 weeks after surgery to 12 months after surgery)
  • Amount of drainage(from the end of surgery until drain removal, which is anticipated on postoperative day 1 or 2)
  • Working time for bone defect filling(from the start of processing allograft or synthetic bone substitute to finish filling bone defect)
  • Pre&postoperative Hemoglobin level(on admission (preop.), postoperative day 2 (postop.))
  • Total operation time(from skin incision to deflation of tourniquet)
  • Temporal change of pain with weight bearing(from 2 weeks after surgery to 12 months after surgery)
  • Temporal progression of bone healing on X-rays(from 3 months after surgery to 12months after surgery)

Study Sites (1)

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