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RecruitingNCT07178041

Remote Ischaemic Conditioning for Post-surgical Complications in Hip Fracture (RIC-FRACTURE)

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
12 (estimated)
Sponsor
Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Background Hip fracture affects 70,000 people in the United Kingdom (UK) and costs an estimated £1.1 billion per year to the National Health Service (NHS). Key clinical indicators, such as early surgical repair, have been shown to improve patient outcomes, however morbidity and mortality remain extremely high, reflecting the urgent need for novel therapies to enhance outcomes. Common complications include infection, cardiovascular events, falls and venous thromboembolism. Remote Ischaemic Conditioning (RIC) is a treatment whereby a blood pressure cuff is inflated around an arm or leg to above systolic pressures to occlude blood flow to the limb for short periods of time, that do not result in harm, but trigger innate mechanisms that reduce inflammation, improve organ blood flow and improve bone healing. These may be beneficial effects after hip fracture. Methods This is a single centre, feasibility study; the participants will receive RIC daily for 40 minutes for 10 days during their inpatient stay. Outcome measures relating primarily to safety, tolerability and feasibility will be collected along with compliance with the intervention. Study feasibility will be determined by success criteria based on recruitment, outcome measure assessment compliance with intervention and follow up. Secondary outcomes including inpatient mortality, inpatient complications, length of inpatient stay, blood pressure, serum inflammatory and stress markers and functional recovery will also be collected at discharge and 3 month follow up. Results Data collected on safety, tolerability, and feasibility will be presented descriptively and simple analysis of variance will be undertaken on quantitative data such as blood pressure and serum inflammatory and stress markers between baseline and follow up time points. The study will hopefully establish whether this therapy is feasible to deliver after acute hip fracture.

Detailed description

This is a single centre, single arm feasibility study. The team will aim to recruit 12 participants to complete a programme of RIC for up to 2 weeks following hip fracture or until discharge from hospital or rehabilitation centre. It is not known whether the main potential protective events resulting from RIC occur due to the short-term effects (likely changes in vascular sensitivity, blood flow etc) or the longer-term effects (modulation of inflammation etc that occur through changes in gene expression). However, the team have chosen a dosing strategy that they feel is practical to deliver given the average length of time people spend in hospital after hip fracture.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDURERemote Ischaemic ConditioningBrief episodes of reversible ischaemia are applied to a particular tissue or organ by inflating pressure cuffs around arms or legs to above systolic pressures (mmHg). This procedure is performed for periods that avoid physical injury to the limbs, but induce neurohormonal, systemic or vascular changes in the body. In this study, the treatment will be delivered on the upper arm or unaffected leg.

Timeline

Start date
2024-08-02
Primary completion
2025-12-31
Completion
2025-12-31
First posted
2025-09-17
Last updated
2025-09-17

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07178041. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.