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Clinical Trials/NCT01538758
NCT01538758
Unknown
Not Applicable

Treatment of Calcifying Tendinitis of the Shoulder: Ultrasound Guided Needling With Subacromial Corticosteroid Injection Versus Ultrasound Guided Subacromial Corticosteroid Injection Only, a Randomized Controlled Trial.

Medisch Spectrum Twente1 site in 1 country80 target enrollmentJuly 2012

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Calcific Tendinitis
Sponsor
Medisch Spectrum Twente
Enrollment
80
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
VAS score on long term
Last Updated
13 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Ultrasound guided needling is becoming an accepted treatment for patients with shoulder pain due to calcifying tendinitis. However, evidence for this treatment is lacking. The investigators expect that patients treated with us guided needling with corticosteroid injection compared with patients treated with only corticosteroid injections in the subacromial bursa have better clinical outcome after one year follow-up.

Detailed Description

Calcifying tendinitis of the shoulder is a common cause of shoulder pain with an incidence ranging from 2.7 % to 6.8 %. This disease of the rotator cuff tendons is characterised by calcifications in the tendons, most commonly in the supraspinatus tendon up to 82%. The aetiology remains unclear. Calcifying tendinitis is regarded as a self-healing condition with usually spontaneous resolution of the calcifications. But some patients have chronic or recurrent pain and disability of the shoulder which requires treatment. The treatment should be minimally invasive and effective in short and long term. Symptomatic treatment is indicated first using non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, therapeutic exercise and non ultrasound guided subacromial corticosteroids injection. The role of corticosteroid injections is unknown due to the lack of good studies. Family doctors and orthopaedic surgeons inject corticosteroids in the shoulder without the guidance of ultrasound; with this method accurate needle placement in the subacromial bursa is not possible. When this treatment fails other therapeutical methods can be used. Ultrasound guided needling is a percutaneous technique of fragmentation or extraction of calcifications in the rotator cuff tendon. Literature shows favourable results but only a few randomized controlled trials were executed. Randomised controlled trials are needed to give more insight in the effectiveness of us guided needling. Comparing two groups of patients treated with us guided corticosteroid injection and one group combined with us guided needling can provide information of the usefulness of us guided needling.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
July 2012
End Date
July 2014
Last Updated
13 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Eva Genbrugge

Principal investigator

Medisch Spectrum Twente

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Shoulder pain without improvement after 3 months despite conservative treatment
  • Calcification on x-ray (Gartner type I of II) and ultrasound in the supraspinatus tendon less than 6 weeks before the treatment
  • All patients are first seen and included by the orthopaedic surgeon

Exclusion Criteria

  • Previous operation of the shoulder
  • Previous ultrasound guided needling of the shoulder
  • Frozen shoulder
  • Last corticosteroid injection less than 3 months ago
  • Comorbidities of the painful shoulder on x-ray or ultrasound ( ruptured tendon, fracture, bursitis,...)
  • No informed consent
  • Pregnancy

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

VAS score on long term

Time Frame: 1 year

Constant score on long term

Time Frame: 1 year

The constant score is a validated scale, measuring the shoulder function. It is a objective measurement independent of the shoulder pain.

Secondary Outcomes

  • Constant score(baseline,6 weeks, 3 months and 6 months)
  • DASH score(baseline, 6 weeks, 3 months, 6 months and 1 year.)
  • Gärtner score of the shoulder calcifications on x-ray(at baseline, directly post-interventional, at 6 weeks and one year.)
  • Scoring system presented by Chiou et all. of the calcifications of the supraspinatus tendon on ultrasound(at baseline, directly post-interventional, at 6 weeks and one year.)
  • VAS score(Baseline, 2 weeks, 6 weeks, 3 months and 6 months)

Study Sites (1)

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