MedPath

Thoracolumbar Burstfractures, Orthesis or No Orthesis

Phase 4
Conditions
Spinal Fractures
Interventions
Device: Orthesis
Behavioral: No orthesis
Registration Number
NCT02784782
Lead Sponsor
Elisabeth-TweeSteden Ziekenhuis
Brief Summary

Rationale: Thoracolumbar burst fractures are frequently seen in the trauma population, they have a large impact on patient's wellbeing and are a large economic burden to society. Thoracolumbar burst fractures might not need the standard care of brace immobilization for adequate treatment and a functional treatment might lead to same or better functional outcomes. Besides that, with functional outcome length of hospital stay might decrease and it might also be cost effective compared to bracing.

Objective: The investigators aim to study the use of braces for thoracolumbar burstfractures, not only by measuring the functional scores and the effect of the bracing or functional treatment on the increase in kyphosis angle, but also on (health related) quality of life and health economics. The investigators hypothesize that no treatment is superior over one other.

Study design: This project is a randomised controlled trial comparing brace and no brace treatment on function, kyphosis angle, pain, quality of life, and costs.

Study population: Patients between 18 and 65, with a single level thoracolumbar burst fracture will be included. The fracture has to have a kyphosis angle of less than 35 degrees and patient has to be neurologically intact. Patients are excluded when they are overweight (BMI\> 35), need multidisciplinary treatment due to multitrauma, or have inadequate knowledge of the Dutch language. Patients included in the brace group will automatically take part in a brace compliance study.

Intervention: One group receives a Thoracolumbar Sacral Orthesis (TLSO) for 6 weeks, the other group receives no TLSO Main study parameters/endpoints: The primary outcome of this study is the functional score at six months after trauma. Secondary outcomes are pain, kyphosis angle, health related quality of life, healthcare costs and brace compliance.

Literature shows no difference in pain, functional outcome or kyphosis angle, therefore no potential risks are known comparing a brace and a functional treatment. Investigators aim that not using the TLSO results in similar functional outcome, pain and kyphosis angle, and less costs. Patients will be seen at first presentation and during two year follow up at the outpatient clinic at six standard care follow up moments. At these follow up moments a X-ray as part of standard care is made. At or just before each scheduled appointment they will fill in questionnaires taking from 15-45 minutes.

Detailed Description

No extra information

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
122
Inclusion Criteria
  • Th10-L4
  • AO foundation type A3 or A4 type fractures
  • Single level
  • Kyphosis < 35 ° at first analysis
  • Neurologically intact
  • Adequate trauma
Exclusion Criteria
  • Inadequate knowledge of the Dutch language
  • Multitrauma, which asks for multidisciplinary treatment
  • Inability to wear a brace due to overweight (BMI> 35)
  • Known osteoporosis

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
OrthesisOrthesisSubjects will wear a TLSO for 6 weeks 24 hours a day or they will not. After 6 weeks the subjects in the TLSO group will decrease and stop the use of the orthesis. Depending on their pain complaints patients will be admitted to the hospital and will get adequate pain management following local protocol Intervention: After fitting the patient starts mobilising, under supervision of a physiotherapist, until pain is under control with oral analgesia. Sports and heavy lifting are prohibited for 3 months. No physiotherapy treatment is needed. During two year follow up patients will be seen at the outpatient clinic during standard care follow up moments. At or just before each scheduled appointment they will fill in questionnaires. These questionnaires will take 15-45 minutes.
No OrthesisNo orthesisSubjects will wear a TLSO for 6 weeks 24 hours a day or they will not. After 6 weeks the subjects in the TLSO group will decrease and stop the use of the orthesis. Depending on their pain complaints patients will be admitted to the hospital and will get adequate pain management following local protocol. Control: The patient starts mobilising, under supervision of a physiotherapist, until pain is under control with oral analgesia. Sports and heavy lifting are prohibited for 3 months. No physiotherapy treatment is needed. During two year follow up patients will be seen at the outpatient clinic during standard care follow up moments. At or just before each scheduled appointment they will fill in questionnaires. These questionnaires will take 15-45 minutes.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Functional scoreat six months, measured up to two years

Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) derived from the Oswestry Low Back Pain Questionnaire used to quantify disability for low back pain. The self-completed questionnaire contains ten topics concerning intensity of pain, lifting, ability to care for oneself, ability to walk, ability to sit, sexual function, ability to stand, social life, sleep quality, and ability to travel. Each topic category is followed by 6 statements describing different potential scenarios in the patient's life relating to the topic. The patient then checks the statement which most closely resembles their situation. Each question is scored on a scale of 0-5 with the first statement being zero and indicating the least amount of disability and the last statement is scored 5 indicating most severe disability. The scores for all questions answered are summed, then multiplied by two to obtain the index (range 0 to 100). Zero is equated with no disability and 100 is the maximum disability possible.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Patient reported health statusup to two years

The Short Form (SF 36) Health Survey is a 36-item, patient-reported survey of patient health. The SF-36 is a measure of health status and an abbreviated variant of it, the SF-6D, is commonly used in health economics as a variable in the quality-adjusted life year calculation to determine the cost-effectiveness of a health treatment. The SF-36 consists of eight scaled scores, which are the weighted sums of the questions in their section. Each scale is directly transformed into a 0-100 scale on the assumption that each question carries equal weight. The lower the score the more disability. The higher the score the less disability i.e., a score of zero is equivalent to maximum disability and a score of 100 is equivalent to no disability.

Painup to two years

Visual Analogue Scale-pain (VAS) is a psychometric response scale which can be used in questionnaires. It is a measurement instrument for subjective characteristics or attitudes that cannot be directly measured. When responding to a VAS item, respondents specify their level of agreement to a statement, in this study pain, by indicating a position along a continuous line between two end-points.

Quality of life scoreup to two years

The EuroQol-5D is a simple questionnaire with five domains (14). In the EQ-5D, health is defined along five dimensions; mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain or discomfort, and anxiety or depression. Each dimension has three levels; no problem, moderate problem, or severe problem. In addition, a scoring algorithm is available by which each health status description can be expressed into a summary score. This summary score ranges from 1 for full health to 0 for death, and can be interpreted as a judgment on the relative desirability of a health status compared with perfect health.

Medical Consumptionup to two years

The Institute for Medical Technology (iMTA) Medical Consumption Questionnaire (iMCQ), is a generic non disease specific instrument for measuring (direct) medical costs. The instrument is a standardized self-reported questionnaire. The iMCQ includes questions related to frequently occurring contacts with health care providers and can be complemented with extra questions that are relevant for specific study populations. A manual is available for a structured use of the questionnaire. Cost-prices be applied to the obtained healthcare utilization by the iMCQ by using the Dutch manual for cost-analyses that is written by iMTA on behalf of the Dutch Healthcare Institute.

Productivity costsup to two years

The Productivity Cost Questionnaire (iPCQ) is a generic non-disease specific questionnaire and is applicable to national and international studies. Currently a Dutch version and an English version of the iPCQ are available. Both indirect cost due to absenteeism as the productivity losses due to presenteeism (i.e. sick, but working) are taken into account. Different methods exist to value productivity. The human-capital method takes the patient's perspective and counts any hour not worked as an hour lost. By contrast, the friction-cost method takes the employer's perspective, and only counts as lost those hours not worked until another employee takes over the patient's work. By applying wage costs the results of the iPCQ can be monetized and as such used in health economic evaluations.

Work Abilityup to two years

To gain more insight in the effects of a post-trauma status on patients work ability the Work Ability Questionnaire can be used. Originally, the work ability questionnaire consists of 7 dimensions . Recently, it was shown that a very strong association exists between the total Work ability Index (WAI)-score and score on a single-item question (i.e. Current work ability compared with the lifetime best) among all participants. Both the WAI and the single-item question showed similar patterns of associations with sick leave, health, and symptoms. The predictive value for the degree of sick leave and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) was strong for both the WAI and the single-item question. So, it suggests that the single-item question on work ability could be used as a simple indicator for assessing the status and progress of work ability in a working population. Considering the extensive questionnaire being used in the proposed study the single-item questions seems more favourable.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Elisabeth Twee Steden ziekenhuis

🇳🇱

Tilburg, Netherlands

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath