Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Withdrawn

WithdrawnNCT03992053

Imaging for SIJ Injection Therapy

The Clinic Application of CBCT XperGuide in Interventional Sacroiliac Joint Pain Therapy

Status
Withdrawn
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
0 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Washington · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The Research question: Among two standard image guidance techniques \[2-dimension (2-D) conventional Fluoroscopy Versus 3-dimension (3-D) Cone-Beam Computed Tomography (CBCT)\], which is the better guidance for Sacroiliac Joint Injection therapy and should be used first? The specific aims: To detect the difference of the first-time success rate, the cross-over rate, the procedural time, the radiation exposure, the incidence of adverse events/complications, and overall satisfaction score between the 2-D Fluoroscopy versus 3-D CBCT guidance for SIJ injection.

Detailed description

There are no published research studies comparing the injection success rates, procedure duration, radiation exposure, and patient comfort between the two standard imaging systems. The investigators hypothesize that the newer 3-D Cone-beam Based Computer Tomography (CBCT) image system will result in higher success rates, shorter procedure times, fewer image snapshots during the procedure, and less patient discomfort than conventional 2-D fluoroscopy imaging. Although the radiation exposure from one-time low-dose 3-D CT reconstruction with CBCT image system at the beginning of the procedure is higher, the number of later snapshots with the 3-D system is likely to be significantly lower. Therefore the 3-D system may result in overall equivalent radiation exposure to the 2-D system. A statistical power analysis was conducted and determined that a sample size of 100 (50 per group) will give 80% power for detecting a difference if the true rates are 65% (2-D Fluoroscopy guidance) and 90% (3-D CBCT guidance). For this study, patients undergoing SIJ injection will be randomized to either Fluoroscopy guidance or CBCT guidance. The primary outcome measure is injection success within 3 attempts of needle placement. Statistical analysis will use the Chi-square test to test whether the rate of injection success differs between the two methods of guidance. In order to provide appropriate clinical care, whenever success is not achieved with the initial guidance method then injection using the other guidance method will be attempted. However, the analysis will only consider whether or not injection success was achieved with the initial guidance method to which the subject was randomized. Whether or not injection success was achieved after crossing over to the other guidance method is not relevant to the primary analysis. In summary, the investigators would like to formally analyze the differences in these two standard image guidance options in SIJ injection therapy. The investigators propose to randomly select the first imaging system that will be utilized during standard medical care in patients scheduled to undergo an SIJ injection. Presumed that there is a difference in success rate between these two standard images, the imaging procedures are considered to be a part of the research.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERsacroiliac joint injectionImage-guided sacroiliac joint injection under fluoroscopy or CT guidance and the success of intraarticular access was demonstrated by inter-articular contrast spread (the standard of care, not part of study intervention).

Timeline

Start date
2019-05-31
Primary completion
2021-04-07
Completion
2021-04-07
First posted
2019-06-19
Last updated
2021-05-05

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03992053. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.