Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04408690

Feasibility of a RCT That Compares Immediate Versus Optional Delayed Surgical Repair After ACL Injury

A Pilot Study to Investigate the Feasibility of Conducting a Randomized Controlled Trial That Compares Immediate Versus Optional Delayed Surgical Repair for Treatment of Acute Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
29 (actual)
Sponsor
Universitaire Ziekenhuizen KU Leuven · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Currently, most patients with an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury undergo surgery. There is a general belief that surgical reconstruction is necessary to return to sport safely and to limit premature knee osteoarthrosis or additional meniscal damage. However, there is unsufficient scientific evidence for this belief. Moreover, several studies show that a reconstruction does not guarantee successful return to sports or the prevention of osteoarthritis or meniscal injuries at all. Therefore, an immediate surgery after an ACL injury is more and more questioned. The only qualitative RCT that exists (KANON trial) could not demonstrate that an immediate reconstruction is an added value (in terms of symptoms, knee function, activity level, osteoarthritis or incidental meniscal damage) compared to a conservative approach consisting of progressive rehabilitation and delayed surgery if there was persistent knee instability. In a future multicenter RCT the investigators want to 1) verify these results and 2) search for predictors that predict which patients from the conservative group do well without delayed surgery. This information is invaluable to physicians as it allows them to decide which treatment is best for the patient. Before performing a large, adequately-powered RCT that compares both treatment options, the investigators will run a pilot study that assesses the feasibility to recruit ACL patients for such RCT. This seems necessary, as many patients still believe that timely surgery is a prerequisite for restoring knee function, for returning to sports and for preventing cartilage degeneration. These preferences for surgery might affect recruitment and adherence to the protocol. Therefore, a pilot study will performed that demonstrates whether a large RCT is feasible with regard to 1) participant recruitment, 2) adherence to the treatment arm they were allocated to and 3) protocol feasibility. The findings of this pilot study will help deciding about progressing to a future definitive RCT.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDUREImmediate anterior cruciate ligament reconstructionNo guidelines on type of ACL reconstruction will be imposed to keep the trial pragmatic. The decision of graft type and surgery technique is a clinical decision made by the orthopaedic surgeons of the participating centra. This surgery will be performed within 12 weeks after the ACL injury.
OTHERRehabilitationAll patients complete rehabilitation under supervision of their own physiotherapist. The investigators will provide some guidelines and criteria, but it is the physiotherapist's choice how to implement these guidelines in clinical practice.
PROCEDUREOptional delayed anterior cruciate ligament reconstructionIf a patient complains about persistent symptomatic instability of the knee or the inability to progress in rehabilitation, delayed surgery can be considered. ACL insufficiency induced instability in combination with a positive pivot shift and an additional MRI are needed to confirm the cause of instability. This surgery will not be performed within the first 12 weeks after the ACL injury.

Timeline

Start date
2020-09-15
Primary completion
2023-03-03
Completion
2023-03-03
First posted
2020-05-29
Last updated
2023-11-15

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Belgium

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04408690. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.