Geniculate Nerve Ablation vs Geniculate Artery Embolization vs Sham for Knee Osteoarthritic Pain
Osteoarthritis, Knee
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Osteoarthritis, Knee focused on measuring artery embolization, nerve ablation
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Patients diagnosed with knee osteoarthritis awaiting knee replacement surgery (expected to be more than a 3m waiting time) presenting with knee pain that patients consider unsatisfactorily managed by routine oral pain medications or cannot tolerate such medications.
- Patients 18 y.o. or older
Exclusion Criteria:
- Patients who are expected to have TKA surgery within 3 months.
Patients in whom the anatomy prevents either procedure
- Vascular anatomy that prevents vascular access such as occluded vasculature to the leg
- Skin or deep infection that would prevent placement of needles
- Suspected concomitant infected knee joint or other signs of infections such as fever
- Patients with uncorrectable abnormal coagulation status (INR >1.5 and plt < 50,000 without use of anticoagulation agents)
- Patients who have known severe allergy to the anesthetic agent or contrast
- Patients with pre-existing conditions, which, in the opinion of the investigator, interfere with the conduct of the study
- Patients who are uncooperative, cannot follow instructions, or who are unlikely to comply with follow-up appointments or fill-out the post-procedural pain questionnaires
- Patients with mental state that may preclude completion of the study procedure or be unable to provide informed consent
Sites / Locations
- McGill University Health Centre
- McGill University Health Centre
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm 3
Sham Comparator
Active Comparator
Active Comparator
Sham procedure
Geniculate artery embolization
Geniculate nerve ablation
The patient will be placed on the procedural table as for the other arms. They will be blinded to what is occuring around them. A script detailing the procedure verbally will be followed by the interventionalists to "waste" time, but the only actual medical act that will be done is freezing of the skin around the knee (as for nerve ablation procedure) and at the groin (as for embolization procedure). Dressings will be applied at the knee and groin area.
The patient will be placed on the procedural table as for the other arms. They will be blinded to what is occuring around them. They will undergo a similar script than everyone one else with freezing of the skin around the knee (as for the ablation procedure) and at the groin and in this group a geniculate artery embolization will be performed via an intraarterial access and use of embolization microspheres injected into the hypervascular arteries feeding the knee joint. Dressings will be applied at the knee and groin area.
The patient will be placed on the procedural table as for the other arms. They will be blinded to what is occuring around them. They will undergo a similar script than everyone one else with freezing of the skin around the knee and at the groin (as for the embolization procedure) and in this group a geniculate nerve ablation will be performed by advancing a radiofrequency ablation (RFA) needle at three locations alongside the tibia and femur where the nerves course and ablation performed. Dressings will be applied at the knee and groin area.