Clinical Trials Directory

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UnknownNCT05086926

Feasibility of Home Exercises With the Addition of a Corticosteroid Injection in Patients With Lateral Hip Pain in General Practice

Feasibility of a Home Exercise Program With the Addition of a Corticosteroid Injection in Patients With Greater Trochanteric Pain Syndrome in General Practice

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
20 (estimated)
Sponsor
Aalborg University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
35 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Pain on the lateral side of the hip is a common condition in general practice, however there is limited evidence on how to best manage the condition. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the feasibility of a combined treatment before comparing this treatment in a larger clinical trial. For the present study 20 patients with lateral hip pain will be invited to receive a corticosteroid injection in the lateral hip prior to performing our exercise program for 8 weeks. After 4 weeks we will do a short interview to get feedback on the exercise program. After 8 weeks we will evaluate the acceptability of the combined treament.

Detailed description

BACKGROUND: Lateral hip pain or greater trochanteric pain syndrome (GTPS) is pain on the outside of the hip due to tendon pathology of the hip abductor tendons. The incidence in primary care has been reported to be 1.6-3.3 per 1000 patients per year. At present, there is no evidence-based guidelines for the treatment of GTPS in primary care. The investigators of the present study have developed an exercise protocol that is planned be evaluated in a future randomized controlled trial in combination with a corticosteroid injection. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study is to evaluate feasibility of a home exercise program with the addition of a corticosteroid injection in patients with GTPS in general practice. The primary aim is to evaluate patient acceptability of 1) performing our exercise program 2) performing exercises after receiving a corticosteroid injection. The secondary aim is to obtain feedback from patients through qualitative interviews to be able to refine the exercise intervention after the study is completed. If the combined treatment is found feasible, it is planned to evaluate the effect in a large randomized controlled trial in the future. STUDY DESIGN: The study design is a mixed methods feasibility study. The participants are patients with GTPS that will receive a combined treatment of one corticosteroid injection in the lateral hip and a home exercise program, which is to be performed for a period of eight weeks. The acceptability of the combined intervention will be evaluated after 8 weeks. RECRUITMENT OF PARTICIPANTS: Patients with GTPS will be recruited from general practice and a private rheumatology practice. Patients will be considered for inclusion if they present to their practitioner with self-reported lateral hip pain. The project manager will make a screening of eligibility by telephone. Those not excluded based on this screening, will be invited to a clinical examination where final eligibility is determined. ENDPOINTS: Baseline is at the clinical examination. One week from baseline there will be a short phone contact to the participants in order to clarify any questions related to the exercise program. No data will be obtained at this point. At 4 weeks there will be a phone interview which also serves as a booster session where the participants are encouraged to maintain their exercise routine. At 8 weeks there will be a physical visit where the participants will hand in their exercise diaries and complete the final questionnaires. CRITERIA OF FEASIBILITY: To conclude that the combined treatments are feasible, ≥ 75% of patients must rate the treatment as 'acceptable'. If any participant drops out after the injection, they will be dichotomized as "not acceptable". A minimum of 15/20 training diaries must be handed in at 8-weeks follow-up. Based on the returned training diaries, ≥ 75% of participants need to complete ≥ 20/28 possible training sessions. A training session will be considered completed if the participant has performed at least one set of each exercise. In case the combined treatments do not prove feasible according to this set of criteria, it is planned to refine the intervention based on feedback from the interviews and evaluate with a small group of patients for a shorter period of time.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
COMBINATION_PRODUCTExercises and CSICorticosteroid injection: The project manager will give the participants one injection with cortisone and lidocaine in the lateral hip at baseline. The procedure will be performed aseptically. Home exercise program: The exercise programis based on previous literature and expert opinions that has been synthesized in a Delphi study conducted by our research group. The exercise program consists of three body weighted strength exercises, that are to be performed every second day for a period of 8 weeks. Exercise instructions will be available as a handout and online with video instructions. The corticosteroid injection usually causes a flare-up in pain with a duration of up to 48 hours. Participants will be instructed to begin the exercises as soon as possible after this flare-up has settled.

Timeline

Start date
2021-10-01
Primary completion
2021-12-01
Completion
2022-02-01
First posted
2021-10-21
Last updated
2021-10-21

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Denmark

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05086926. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.