Trials / Recruiting
RecruitingNCT06726434
Evaluation of Percutaneous Cryoneurotomy Compared to Surgical Open Neurotomy for the Management of Equinovarus Foot Deformity in Patients With Refractory Lower Limb Spasticity After Stroke
Evaluation of Percutaneous Cryoneurotomy Compared to Surgical Open Neurotomy for the Management of Equinovarus Foot Deformity in Patients With Refractory Lower Limb Spasticity After Stroke: a Multicenter, Randomized Controlled, Non-inferiority Trial
- Status
- Recruiting
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 114 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- Poitiers University Hospital · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
CRYOSTROKE study is designed : * to compare the efficacy and safety of percutaneous CryoNeurotomie (CN) versus surgical neurotomy (SN) on spasticity, 90 days after intervention, in post-stroke patients presenting with spastic equinovarus foot and, * to ensure that potential clinical effect/safety remain stable within time, with a 12-month follow-up.
Detailed description
Stroke, arising from cerebral vascular hemorrhage or ischemia, represents a major health-care problem affecting more than 140,000 persons in France every year. One of the major concerns after stroke is impairment of the pyramidal tract and parapyramidal fibers, resulting in upper motor neuron syndrome and spasticity. Up to 20% to 40% of stroke survivors develop spasticity, which dramatically impacts health status, pain, functional capacity, and ultimately, quality of life. Spastic equinovarus foot (SEF) is the most common deformity due to lower limb spasticity and is defined as a combination of an abnormal plantar-flexion, inversion and adduction of the foot. Consequently, SEF severely impairs walking capability and mobility, impacting daily life activities and restricting social participation. In addition to therapeutical physical rehabilitation programs, two main treatments can be proposed. First, SEF can be initially treated with focal botulinum toxin injections that for reducing spasticity. However, botulinum toxin injections are effective for only a limited period of time, and iterative reinjections are required. Second, permanent treatment of spasticity can be achieved by surgical neurotomy. This procedure, variably combined with muscle and tendon lengthening in the event of associated retractions, can be considered as the long-term radical and effective gold standard, but at the price of surgical invasiveness and complications. A recent alternative allowing for both permanent treatment and a minimally invasive approach has been introduced: "percutaneous cryoneurotomy". While this approach has provided promising results, as shown in multiple case reports, its efficacy has yet to be determined in a randomized control study. CryoNeurotomy (CN) was first performed and developed in daily practice for the upper limb. Through a mentoring process, a feasibility study was performed on cadavers and transposed the technique to human procedures in a pilot study. The results from the first patients, with a 90-day follow-up period, are promising, with decreased spasticity and significantly increased walking capabilities. Major potential advantages of percutaneous CN compared to surgical neurotomy were identified, such as minimal skin incision, faster procedure, far less invasiveness of muscle tissue and adjacent neuro-vascular structures, particularly a decreased risk of post-operative sensory loss or neuropathic pain, no need for general anesthesia (local anesthesia) and possible performance on an outpatient basis. By enlarging Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (PMR) therapeutical armamentarium, percutaneous CN could represent a new compromise between botulinum toxin iterative injections and radical surgery, in terms of invasiveness \& complications/long-term benefit ratio on spasticity and function. The CRYOSTROKE study was designed: * to compare the efficacy and safety of percutaneous CN versus surgical neurotomy on spasticity, 90 days after intervention, in post-stroke patients presenting with spastic equinovarus foot and, * to ensure that potential clinical effect/safety remain stable within time, with a 12-month follow-up.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| PROCEDURE | Surgical neurotomy (SN) | Surgical neurotomy will be performed under general anesthesia according to the previous description. Muscle relaxant drugs will not be used in order to prevent any interference with the intraoperative electrical stimulation. The patient will be placed in a prone position and a vertical cutaneous incision will be made at the popliteal fossa location. The tibial nerve will be dissected and the motor nerve branches of the soleus, gastrocnemius, tibialis posterior and flexor hallucis longus will be identified with intraoperative tripolar electrical stimulation. The selected motor nerve branches will be partially sectioned over a 5mm length under the microscope. The extent of nerve section will be determined according to the degree of spasticity and to the intraoperative residual muscular contraction under electrical stimulation |
| PROCEDURE | Cryoneurotomy (CN) | After the use of an aseptic technique with 2% chlorhexidine, betadine application and a local anesthesia with lidocaine 1% (3ml), percutaneous cryoneurotomy will be performed with METRUM CRYOFLEX device guided by ultrasound with 1.2mm cryoprobe at -89°C placed through a #16 angio guide. Electrical stimulation will be performed to confirm tibial nerve contact at 0.8 mV. The ice ball will be repositioned to two spots along the nerve. Each lesion will be treated for 2min cryoneurolysis at -89°C, followed by 2min without freezing (passive defreezing period) and 2min of cryoneurolysis at -89°C, based on cryotherapy for pain management. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2025-07-09
- Primary completion
- 2029-04-09
- Completion
- 2029-06-09
- First posted
- 2024-12-10
- Last updated
- 2026-02-25
Locations
7 sites across 1 country: France
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06726434. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.