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Influence of Intraoperative Repair Tension on Postoperative Healing of Full-thickness Rotator Cuff Tears (TENS-RCT)

Primary Purpose

Rotator Cuff Tear

Status
Withdrawn
Phase
Not Applicable
Locations
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
Sterile Spring Scale
Sponsored by
Balgrist University Hospital
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional treatment trial for Rotator Cuff Tear

Eligibility Criteria

18 Years - undefined (Adult, Older Adult)All SexesAccepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Signed informed consent
  • Male/female from 18-99 years
  • All arthroscopic reparable transmural supra-/infraspinatus tears
  • German speaking

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Previous operation on the ipsilateral rotator cuff
  • Irreparable rotator cuff tear (supra- and / or infraspinatus and / or subscapularis)
  • static antero-superior subluxation of humeral head
  • dynamic antero-superior subluxation of humeral head
  • pseudoparalysis for anteflexion, hornblow sign, dropping- arm sign
  • fatty infiltration goutallier 3-4 (MRI)
  • reduced acromiohumeral distance <7mm (RX)
  • intraoperative not reparable
  • Mild/severe osteoarthritis (RX, Hamada II-IV)
  • Inability of patient (language problems, mental illness, dementia)

Sites / Locations

    Arms of the Study

    Arm 1

    Arm Type

    Other

    Arm Label

    Tension Measuring

    Arm Description

    Measuring intraoperative tension of rotator cuff tendon with sterile spring Balance.

    Outcomes

    Primary Outcome Measures

    Tendon tension
    Measuring tendon Tension according to the footprint in 0° and 45° abduction with a Newtonmeter.

    Secondary Outcome Measures

    Rotator cuff re-tear
    Evaluation re-tear of repaired rotator cuff in MRI scan

    Full Information

    First Posted
    June 29, 2017
    Last Updated
    July 11, 2020
    Sponsor
    Balgrist University Hospital
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    1. Study Identification

    Unique Protocol Identification Number
    NCT03318627
    Brief Title
    Influence of Intraoperative Repair Tension on Postoperative Healing of Full-thickness Rotator Cuff Tears
    Acronym
    TENS-RCT
    Official Title
    Influence of Intraoperative Repair Tension on Postoperative Healing of Full-thickness Rotator Cuff Tears
    Study Type
    Interventional

    2. Study Status

    Record Verification Date
    July 2020
    Overall Recruitment Status
    Withdrawn
    Why Stopped
    No capacity to conduct the study
    Study Start Date
    July 6, 2020 (Actual)
    Primary Completion Date
    July 6, 2020 (Actual)
    Study Completion Date
    July 6, 2020 (Actual)

    3. Sponsor/Collaborators

    Responsible Party, by Official Title
    Sponsor
    Name of the Sponsor
    Balgrist University Hospital

    4. Oversight

    Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product
    No
    Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product
    No

    5. Study Description

    Brief Summary
    Relevant problems of rotator cuff repair: High retear rate after rotator cuff repair of 13%, despite regard of the criteria for "reparability" of a tear. Long and exhausting rehabilitation after rotator cuff repair with an abduction splint for six weeks. Hypothesis: The investigators believe that high tension repair has a higher retear rate than low tension repair, regardless of the tear size. The investigators also believe that abduction of the arm can reduce relevant tension on the repair. But not each repair benefits equally from this. Relevance of this hypothesis: The ingenious advantage of this new parameter (intraoperative repair tension) is, that it can be influenced. In future, if this hypothesis would be true, the repair tension could be reduced intraoperative by release, side-to-side (margin convergence) repair or medialization of the footprint and thereby convert a high risk to a low risk tension repair. Moreover, it could be that patients with a low tension repair does not necessarily have to wear an abduction splint. And on the other hand, high tension repair patients should probably wear the abduction splint longer with gradually reduction. Approach: The present research plan focused on a new intraoperative (arthroscopic) determinable parameter ("repair tension" on footprint in 0° and 40° abduction) to determine the risk of recurrence after tendon repair in rotator cuff tears, which are pre- and intraoperative defined as "reparable". Therefore, the tension of the repaired tendon is measured intraoperative with a spring balance (newtonmeter) and correlated with the postoperative retear-rate. • Measure intraoperative repair tension with the arm in 0° and 40° of abduction
    Detailed Description
    How the investigators plan the study: This is a prospective clinical study, risk category A. It is one-armed (all participants have the same procedure/rehabilitation) and single-blinded (participants doesn't knows the repair tension). The investigators are an orthopaedic clinic in Zurich (Universitätsklinik Balgrist, Zürich) with about 250 arthroscopic rotator cuff repairs per year. Our plan is to recruit at least 100 participants in a year for this prospective clinical study. The participants have to fulfill the inclusion criterions. The diagnosis for the rotator cuff tears are made on the basis of arthro-MRI scans. The investigators do the operations in our clinic. The entire follow-up is one year for each participant. We plan three regular postoperative consultations. The tendon healing is controlled postoperative by ultrasound (six weeks and 4 month postoperative) and by MRI (one year postoperative). Visit 0: participant recruitment: The participants who are suitable for the study, will be recruited in the clinic for the study. They are aware of the essential information and the process and have 14 days time to read the information paper. Visit 1: preoperative phase: The following parameters are collected by default: Constant score Begin of symptoms (subjective shoulder value, visual analogue scale) Questionnaire Arthro-MRI (fatty infiltration, tear size, tendon retraction, length of central tendon) RX (Critical Shoulder Angle) Visit 2: intraoperative phase: The intraoperative procedure is standardized: Postoperative immobilisation in an abduction splint in 40° abduction with passive mobilisation (physiotherapy) without adduction for six weeks. Visit 3: 6 weeks postoperative phase: The following parameters are collected by default: Clinical examination Subjective shoulder value Pain-VAS Questionnaire Complications Ultrasound (retear yes/no) The abduction splint is removed. Other six weeks mobilisation active and active-assisted without weights and strength until the 12th week (clinic standard). Visit 4: 4 months postoperative phase: The following parameters are collected by default: Clinical examination Active ROM (abduction, flexion, external rotation) Passive ROM (glenohumeral abduction, external rotation) Subjective shoulder value Pain-VAS Questionnaire Complications Ultrasound (retear yes/no) There is an increase in strength and agility Visit 5: 1 year postoperative phase: The following parameters are collected by default: Clinical examination Passive ROM (glenohumeral abduction, external rotation) Subjective shoulder value Pain-VAS Constant score Questionnaire Complications MRI (fatty infiltration) X-ray (critical shoulder value) The study is finished for the patient How the investigators can realise the aims: Aim 1: Correlation of intraoperative repair tension in 0° and 40° abduction on footprint with postoperative healing. The investigators measure intraoperative repair tension for each participant in 0° and 40° abduction in gram with a spring balance. Then, measurement of healing rate of these tendon reconstructions over one year. The investigators do three regular follow-ups. In week 6 and month 4, control of healing with ultrasound and one year postoperative with an MRI scan. Intraoperative repair tension is correlated with retear rate. Cut-off value to separate high risk and low risk tension repairs is evaluated. Aim 2: Correlation of other parameters with postoperative healing: The investigator correlate other parameters with the postoperative healing. Following parameters are collected in preoperative MRI scans: tear size in cm, tear retraction in cm, central tendon length in cm, fatty infiltration with the classification of Goutallier I-IV. In preoperative x-rays we measure the critical shoulder angle in degree. Intraoperative measurement of: tendon quality in four stages and the tear pattern visual (see above, "Visit 2"). Aim 3: Can intraoperative repair tension be predicted preoperative by MRI findings?: For this question, measurement of following parameters: tendon size in cm, tendon retraction in cm, length of central tendon in cm and fatty infiltration with the classification of Goutallier I-IV. Statistical evaluation with correlation of intraoperative repair tension with these MRI findings. Aim 4: Correlation of high repair tension with pain: Correlation of pain with repair tension. Measurement of pain in each consultation with a visual analogue scale from 0-10 (0 no pain, 10 very much pain). Measurement range of motion of the participants (active and passive) and correlate stiffness with pain and with repair tension. Aim 5: Correlation of repair tension with postoperative muscle atrophy, fatty infiltration and tendon length: Measurement of muscle atrophy, fatty infiltration and tendon length in the MRI scan preoperative and one year postoperative to compare. The muscle atrophy is quantified with tangent sign and occupation ratio. Fatty infiltration with the classification of Goutallier and tendon length in cm. Then, correlation pre- and postoperative changes with the repair tension. Aim 6: Lower retear rate in type B- and C-reconstruction compared to type A- reconstruction? (type A-C) If possible, the investigators want to correlate different reconstruction types (A-C) with similar tension repairs.

    6. Conditions and Keywords

    Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
    Rotator Cuff Tear

    7. Study Design

    Primary Purpose
    Treatment
    Study Phase
    Not Applicable
    Interventional Study Model
    Single Group Assignment
    Masking
    None (Open Label)
    Allocation
    N/A
    Enrollment
    0 (Actual)

    8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

    Arm Title
    Tension Measuring
    Arm Type
    Other
    Arm Description
    Measuring intraoperative tension of rotator cuff tendon with sterile spring Balance.
    Intervention Type
    Device
    Intervention Name(s)
    Sterile Spring Scale
    Intervention Description
    Measuring intraoperative tension of tendon of rotator cuff tear
    Primary Outcome Measure Information:
    Title
    Tendon tension
    Description
    Measuring tendon Tension according to the footprint in 0° and 45° abduction with a Newtonmeter.
    Time Frame
    during surgery
    Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
    Title
    Rotator cuff re-tear
    Description
    Evaluation re-tear of repaired rotator cuff in MRI scan
    Time Frame
    one year

    10. Eligibility

    Sex
    All
    Minimum Age & Unit of Time
    18 Years
    Accepts Healthy Volunteers
    Accepts Healthy Volunteers
    Eligibility Criteria
    Inclusion Criteria: Signed informed consent Male/female from 18-99 years All arthroscopic reparable transmural supra-/infraspinatus tears German speaking Exclusion Criteria: Previous operation on the ipsilateral rotator cuff Irreparable rotator cuff tear (supra- and / or infraspinatus and / or subscapularis) static antero-superior subluxation of humeral head dynamic antero-superior subluxation of humeral head pseudoparalysis for anteflexion, hornblow sign, dropping- arm sign fatty infiltration goutallier 3-4 (MRI) reduced acromiohumeral distance <7mm (RX) intraoperative not reparable Mild/severe osteoarthritis (RX, Hamada II-IV) Inability of patient (language problems, mental illness, dementia)

    12. IPD Sharing Statement

    Plan to Share IPD
    No
    Citations:
    PubMed Identifier
    24748610
    Citation
    Le BT, Wu XL, Lam PH, Murrell GA. Factors predicting rotator cuff retears: an analysis of 1000 consecutive rotator cuff repairs. Am J Sports Med. 2014 May;42(5):1134-42. doi: 10.1177/0363546514525336. Epub 2014 Apr 18.
    Results Reference
    background
    PubMed Identifier
    15930531
    Citation
    Boileau P, Brassart N, Watkinson DJ, Carles M, Hatzidakis AM, Krishnan SG. Arthroscopic repair of full-thickness tears of the supraspinatus: does the tendon really heal? J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2005 Jun;87(6):1229-40. doi: 10.2106/JBJS.D.02035.
    Results Reference
    background
    PubMed Identifier
    9372778
    Citation
    Thomazeau H, Boukobza E, Morcet N, Chaperon J, Langlais F. Prediction of rotator cuff repair results by magnetic resonance imaging. Clin Orthop Relat Res. 1997 Nov;(344):275-83.
    Results Reference
    background
    PubMed Identifier
    22926748
    Citation
    Meyer DC, Wieser K, Farshad M, Gerber C. Retraction of supraspinatus muscle and tendon as predictors of success of rotator cuff repair. Am J Sports Med. 2012 Oct;40(10):2242-7. doi: 10.1177/0363546512457587. Epub 2012 Aug 27.
    Results Reference
    background
    PubMed Identifier
    17671017
    Citation
    Liem D, Lichtenberg S, Magosch P, Habermeyer P. Magnetic resonance imaging of arthroscopic supraspinatus tendon repair. J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2007 Aug;89(8):1770-6. doi: 10.2106/JBJS.F.00749.
    Results Reference
    background

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    Influence of Intraoperative Repair Tension on Postoperative Healing of Full-thickness Rotator Cuff Tears

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