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Mini-invasive Preventive Fixation of the Contralateral Femoral Neck in Patients Operated on for a Femoral Neck Fracture (PREFIX)

Primary Purpose

Femoral Neck Fractures

Status
Not yet recruiting
Phase
Phase 3
Locations
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
Preventive fixation of the contralateral femoral neck (Stryker Trauma and Depuy Synthes screws)
Sponsored by
Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional prevention trial for Femoral Neck Fractures

Eligibility Criteria

80 Years - undefined (Older Adult)All SexesDoes not accept healthy volunteers

Inclusion Criteria:

  • women and men
  • 80 years or older
  • operated on for a femoral neck fracture
  • presenting one, or more, added clinical risk factor of hip fracture*
  • a fragility fracture in the past five years
  • a history of fall in the past 12 months (not considering the fall that led to the present fracture)
  • a very high risk of falling: use of psychoactive medication or impaired vision or impaired neuromuscular function
  • BMI lower than 20kg/m2
  • giving her/his consent.
  • affiliated to the social security

Exclusion Criteria:

  • history of a contralateral proximal femoral fracture
  • history of a surgical operation of the contralateral proximal femur
  • ongoing infection (bone or soft-tissue) on the contralateral hip
  • contraindication of MIPF of the contralateral hip
  • non ambulatory patients
  • patients already included in the study
  • patients with contraindication to the medical devices under evaluation
  • patients not suitable for a surgical procedure (including not suitable for an anaesthetic)
  • patients with a benign or malignant bone lesion of the contralateral femur
  • patients included in another clinical research which could directly have an effect on the femoral neck bone strength
  • patients presenting with a grade 4 Kellgren-Lawrence osteoarthritis of the contralateral hip and reporting significant clinical symptoms
  • patients with an life expectancy of less than 3 months
  • patients with a legal representative (tutorship or guardianship) and insane patients will be excluded

Sites / Locations

    Arms of the Study

    Arm 1

    Arm 2

    Arm Type

    Experimental

    No Intervention

    Arm Label

    Preventive fixation of the contralateral femoral neck

    No fixation

    Arm Description

    Mini-invasive preventive fixation of the contralateral femoral neck : 6.5mm titanium cannulated self-tapping/self-drilling screws (Stryker Trauma and Depuy Synthes) : 2 screws per patients

    Outcomes

    Primary Outcome Measures

    Cumulative incidence of a contralateral fracture of the proximal femur

    Secondary Outcome Measures

    Mortality
    Proportion of patients requiring surgery on the contralateral proximal femur regardless the reason
    Patient's autonomy
    Patient's autonomy will be assessed using the AGGIR scale. The AGGIR scale has 10 physical and mental variables and seven variables relating to domestic and social activities; the former are discriminative and the latter illustrative variables. The rating depends on the person doing the activity on her/his own; however, material and technical aids are allowed (glasses, wheelchair, etc). Each variable can take one of three modalities: A (perform alone), C (cannot perform alone), and B (can perform alone but on conditions).
    Patient's autonomy
    Patient's autonomy will be assessed using the AGGIR scale. The AGGIR scale has 10 physical and mental variables and seven variables relating to domestic and social activities; the former are discriminative and the latter illustrative variables. The rating depends on the person doing the activity on her/his own; however, material and technical aids are allowed (glasses, wheelchair, etc). Each variable can take one of three modalities: A (perform alone), C (cannot perform alone), and B (can perform alone but on conditions).
    Patient's autonomy
    Patient's autonomy will be assessed using the AGGIR scale. The AGGIR scale has 10 physical and mental variables and seven variables relating to domestic and social activities; the former are discriminative and the latter illustrative variables. The rating depends on the person doing the activity on her/his own; however, material and technical aids are allowed (glasses, wheelchair, etc). Each variable can take one of three modalities: A (perform alone), C (cannot perform alone), and B (can perform alone but on conditions).
    Patient's autonomy
    Patient's autonomy will be assessed using the AGGIR scale. The AGGIR scale has 10 physical and mental variables and seven variables relating to domestic and social activities; the former are discriminative and the latter illustrative variables. The rating depends on the person doing the activity on her/his own; however, material and technical aids are allowed (glasses, wheelchair, etc). Each variable can take one of three modalities: A (perform alone), C (cannot perform alone), and B (can perform alone but on conditions).
    Patient's function
    Patient's function will be assessed using the Parker score. The Parker scale assessment of mobility rates three questions: able to get about the house; able to get out of the house; able to go shopping. Each question may be answered as "no difficulty", with an aid"; "with the help from another person"; "not at all". Answer are weighted from 3 (no difficulty) to 0 (not at all). The maximum mobility score is 9; the lowest is 0.
    Patient's function
    Patient's function will be assessed using the Parker score. The Parker scale assessment of mobility rates three questions: able to get about the house; able to get out of the house; able to go shopping. Each question may be answered as "no difficulty", with an aid"; "with the help from another person"; "not at all". Answer are weighted from 3 (no difficulty) to 0 (not at all). The maximum mobility score is 9; the lowest is 0.
    Patient's function
    Patient's function will be assessed using the Parker score. The Parker scale assessment of mobility rates three questions: able to get about the house; able to get out of the house; able to go shopping. Each question may be answered as "no difficulty", with an aid"; "with the help from another person"; "not at all". Answer are weighted from 3 (no difficulty) to 0 (not at all). The maximum mobility score is 9; the lowest is 0.
    Patient's function
    Patient's function will be assessed using the Parker score. The Parker scale assessment of mobility rates three questions: able to get about the house; able to get out of the house; able to go shopping. Each question may be answered as "no difficulty", with an aid"; "with the help from another person"; "not at all". Answer are weighted from 3 (no difficulty) to 0 (not at all). The maximum mobility score is 9; the lowest is 0.
    Proportion of patients receiving an antiosteoporotic treatment
    Number of falls since the last follow-up visit
    Number of falls since the last follow-up visit
    Number of falls since the last follow-up visit
    Number of falls since the last follow-up visit
    Pain on the contralateral hip
    Patients will be asked to rate the level of pain of the contralateral hip using a visual analogic scale, which goes from 0 (no pain) to 10 (maximum pain imaginable).
    Pain on the contralateral hip
    Patients will be asked to rate the level of pain of the contralateral hip using a visual analogic scale,, which goes from 0 (no pain) to 10 (maximum pain imaginable).
    Pain on the contralateral hip
    Patients will be asked to rate the level of pain of the contralateral hip using a visual analogic scale,, which goes from 0 (no pain) to 10 (maximum pain imaginable).
    Pain on the contralateral hip
    Patients will be asked to rate the level of pain of the contralateral hip using a visual analogic scale,, which goes from 0 (no pain) to 10 (maximum pain imaginable).

    Full Information

    First Posted
    May 26, 2020
    Last Updated
    May 28, 2020
    Sponsor
    Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris
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    1. Study Identification

    Unique Protocol Identification Number
    NCT04408053
    Brief Title
    Mini-invasive Preventive Fixation of the Contralateral Femoral Neck in Patients Operated on for a Femoral Neck Fracture
    Acronym
    PREFIX
    Official Title
    Mini-invasive Preventive Fixation of the Contralateral Femoral Neck in Patients Operated on for a Femoral Neck Fracture
    Study Type
    Interventional

    2. Study Status

    Record Verification Date
    May 2020
    Overall Recruitment Status
    Not yet recruiting
    Study Start Date
    September 1, 2020 (Anticipated)
    Primary Completion Date
    September 1, 2023 (Anticipated)
    Study Completion Date
    September 1, 2025 (Anticipated)

    3. Sponsor/Collaborators

    Responsible Party, by Official Title
    Sponsor
    Name of the Sponsor
    Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris

    4. Oversight

    Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product
    No
    Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product
    No
    Data Monitoring Committee
    Yes

    5. Study Description

    Brief Summary
    In France, the annual incidence of hip fracture is about 80 000 with more than 75% of these fractures occurring in patients aged 80 years old or more. About 10% percent of patients presenting with a hip fracture will sustain a contralateral hip fracture, most within 3 years. The consequences of a hip fracture are dramatic: 20% of patients die in the first year and less than half those who survive regain their previous level of function. Hip fractures are invariably associated with chronic pain, reduced mobility, disability, and an increasing degree of dependence. The efficacy of pharmacological treatments to prevent a contralateral hip fracture is marginal and postponed and compliance is known to be poor. Osteoporosis is associated with cortical thinning and trabecular bone loss. Therefore, the mini-invasive preventive fixation (MIPF) of the contralateral femoral neck is appealing. The effect is immediate and compliance is certain. Morbidity is minimal because it is performed during the same operation as the fixation of the femoral neck fracture. The main objective of this study is to determine whether the mini-invasive preventive fixation (MIPF) of the contralateral femoral neck in patients having a femoral neck fracture is superior to no fixation regarding the occurrence of a contralateral hip fracture within 3 years.

    6. Conditions and Keywords

    Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
    Femoral Neck Fractures

    7. Study Design

    Primary Purpose
    Prevention
    Study Phase
    Phase 3
    Interventional Study Model
    Parallel Assignment
    Masking
    None (Open Label)
    Allocation
    Randomized
    Enrollment
    812 (Anticipated)

    8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

    Arm Title
    Preventive fixation of the contralateral femoral neck
    Arm Type
    Experimental
    Arm Description
    Mini-invasive preventive fixation of the contralateral femoral neck : 6.5mm titanium cannulated self-tapping/self-drilling screws (Stryker Trauma and Depuy Synthes) : 2 screws per patients
    Arm Title
    No fixation
    Arm Type
    No Intervention
    Intervention Type
    Device
    Intervention Name(s)
    Preventive fixation of the contralateral femoral neck (Stryker Trauma and Depuy Synthes screws)
    Intervention Description
    6.5mm titanium cannulated self-tapping/self-drilling screws (Stryker Trauma and Depuy Synthes) : 2 screws per patients
    Primary Outcome Measure Information:
    Title
    Cumulative incidence of a contralateral fracture of the proximal femur
    Time Frame
    at 3 years after randomization
    Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
    Title
    Mortality
    Time Frame
    within 3 years after randomization
    Title
    Proportion of patients requiring surgery on the contralateral proximal femur regardless the reason
    Time Frame
    within 3 years after randomization
    Title
    Patient's autonomy
    Description
    Patient's autonomy will be assessed using the AGGIR scale. The AGGIR scale has 10 physical and mental variables and seven variables relating to domestic and social activities; the former are discriminative and the latter illustrative variables. The rating depends on the person doing the activity on her/his own; however, material and technical aids are allowed (glasses, wheelchair, etc). Each variable can take one of three modalities: A (perform alone), C (cannot perform alone), and B (can perform alone but on conditions).
    Time Frame
    at 3 months after randomization
    Title
    Patient's autonomy
    Description
    Patient's autonomy will be assessed using the AGGIR scale. The AGGIR scale has 10 physical and mental variables and seven variables relating to domestic and social activities; the former are discriminative and the latter illustrative variables. The rating depends on the person doing the activity on her/his own; however, material and technical aids are allowed (glasses, wheelchair, etc). Each variable can take one of three modalities: A (perform alone), C (cannot perform alone), and B (can perform alone but on conditions).
    Time Frame
    at 1 year after randomization
    Title
    Patient's autonomy
    Description
    Patient's autonomy will be assessed using the AGGIR scale. The AGGIR scale has 10 physical and mental variables and seven variables relating to domestic and social activities; the former are discriminative and the latter illustrative variables. The rating depends on the person doing the activity on her/his own; however, material and technical aids are allowed (glasses, wheelchair, etc). Each variable can take one of three modalities: A (perform alone), C (cannot perform alone), and B (can perform alone but on conditions).
    Time Frame
    at 2 years after randomization
    Title
    Patient's autonomy
    Description
    Patient's autonomy will be assessed using the AGGIR scale. The AGGIR scale has 10 physical and mental variables and seven variables relating to domestic and social activities; the former are discriminative and the latter illustrative variables. The rating depends on the person doing the activity on her/his own; however, material and technical aids are allowed (glasses, wheelchair, etc). Each variable can take one of three modalities: A (perform alone), C (cannot perform alone), and B (can perform alone but on conditions).
    Time Frame
    at 3 years after randomization
    Title
    Patient's function
    Description
    Patient's function will be assessed using the Parker score. The Parker scale assessment of mobility rates three questions: able to get about the house; able to get out of the house; able to go shopping. Each question may be answered as "no difficulty", with an aid"; "with the help from another person"; "not at all". Answer are weighted from 3 (no difficulty) to 0 (not at all). The maximum mobility score is 9; the lowest is 0.
    Time Frame
    at 3 months after randomization
    Title
    Patient's function
    Description
    Patient's function will be assessed using the Parker score. The Parker scale assessment of mobility rates three questions: able to get about the house; able to get out of the house; able to go shopping. Each question may be answered as "no difficulty", with an aid"; "with the help from another person"; "not at all". Answer are weighted from 3 (no difficulty) to 0 (not at all). The maximum mobility score is 9; the lowest is 0.
    Time Frame
    at 1 year after randomization
    Title
    Patient's function
    Description
    Patient's function will be assessed using the Parker score. The Parker scale assessment of mobility rates three questions: able to get about the house; able to get out of the house; able to go shopping. Each question may be answered as "no difficulty", with an aid"; "with the help from another person"; "not at all". Answer are weighted from 3 (no difficulty) to 0 (not at all). The maximum mobility score is 9; the lowest is 0.
    Time Frame
    at 2 years after randomization
    Title
    Patient's function
    Description
    Patient's function will be assessed using the Parker score. The Parker scale assessment of mobility rates three questions: able to get about the house; able to get out of the house; able to go shopping. Each question may be answered as "no difficulty", with an aid"; "with the help from another person"; "not at all". Answer are weighted from 3 (no difficulty) to 0 (not at all). The maximum mobility score is 9; the lowest is 0.
    Time Frame
    at 3 years after randomization
    Title
    Proportion of patients receiving an antiosteoporotic treatment
    Time Frame
    at 3 months after randomization
    Title
    Number of falls since the last follow-up visit
    Time Frame
    at 3 months after randomization
    Title
    Number of falls since the last follow-up visit
    Time Frame
    at 1 year after randomization
    Title
    Number of falls since the last follow-up visit
    Time Frame
    at 2 years after randomization
    Title
    Number of falls since the last follow-up visit
    Time Frame
    at 3 years after randomization
    Title
    Pain on the contralateral hip
    Description
    Patients will be asked to rate the level of pain of the contralateral hip using a visual analogic scale, which goes from 0 (no pain) to 10 (maximum pain imaginable).
    Time Frame
    at 3 months after randomization
    Title
    Pain on the contralateral hip
    Description
    Patients will be asked to rate the level of pain of the contralateral hip using a visual analogic scale,, which goes from 0 (no pain) to 10 (maximum pain imaginable).
    Time Frame
    at 1 year after randomization
    Title
    Pain on the contralateral hip
    Description
    Patients will be asked to rate the level of pain of the contralateral hip using a visual analogic scale,, which goes from 0 (no pain) to 10 (maximum pain imaginable).
    Time Frame
    at 2 years after randomization
    Title
    Pain on the contralateral hip
    Description
    Patients will be asked to rate the level of pain of the contralateral hip using a visual analogic scale,, which goes from 0 (no pain) to 10 (maximum pain imaginable).
    Time Frame
    at 3 years after randomization

    10. Eligibility

    Sex
    All
    Minimum Age & Unit of Time
    80 Years
    Accepts Healthy Volunteers
    No
    Eligibility Criteria
    Inclusion Criteria: women and men 80 years or older operated on for a femoral neck fracture presenting one, or more, added clinical risk factor of hip fracture* a fragility fracture in the past five years a history of fall in the past 12 months (not considering the fall that led to the present fracture) a very high risk of falling: use of psychoactive medication or impaired vision or impaired neuromuscular function BMI lower than 20kg/m2 giving her/his consent. affiliated to the social security Exclusion Criteria: history of a contralateral proximal femoral fracture history of a surgical operation of the contralateral proximal femur ongoing infection (bone or soft-tissue) on the contralateral hip contraindication of MIPF of the contralateral hip non ambulatory patients patients already included in the study patients with contraindication to the medical devices under evaluation patients not suitable for a surgical procedure (including not suitable for an anaesthetic) patients with a benign or malignant bone lesion of the contralateral femur patients included in another clinical research which could directly have an effect on the femoral neck bone strength patients presenting with a grade 4 Kellgren-Lawrence osteoarthritis of the contralateral hip and reporting significant clinical symptoms patients with an life expectancy of less than 3 months patients with a legal representative (tutorship or guardianship) and insane patients will be excluded
    Central Contact Person:
    First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name or Official Title & Degree
    David Biau
    Phone
    +331 58 41 30 37
    Email
    david.biau@aphp.fr
    First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name or Official Title & Degree
    Matthieu RESCHE-RIGON, Pr
    Phone
    0142499742
    Ext
    0142499742
    Email
    matthieu.resche-rigon@univ-paris-diderot.fr

    12. IPD Sharing Statement

    Plan to Share IPD
    Undecided

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    Mini-invasive Preventive Fixation of the Contralateral Femoral Neck in Patients Operated on for a Femoral Neck Fracture

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