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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07473947

Performance and Safety Follow-up of Bioabsorbable Headless Inion CompressOnTM Screws in the Fixation of Bone Fractures in Ankle, Knee and Elbow of Pediatric and Adolescent Patients

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
80 (estimated)
Sponsor
Inion Oy · Industry
Sex
All
Age
17 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The study in question is a post market clinical follow up (PMCF) study to follow up the safety and performance of bioabsorbable headless compression screw Inion CompressOn in fracture fixation of the ankle, knee and elbow of pediatric and adolescent patients. The study aims to recruit 80 patients who meet the acceptance criteria. The follow-up time for each study patient is 4 years. The study is a single center single group study which is conducted in Lighthouse Hospital at Turku University Hospital (TYKS) in Finland. The main focus of the study in terms of performance is to follow up the bone healing/ossification of operated areas. The main focus of the study in terms of safety is to evaluate the occurrence of adverse events and required revision surgeries that are or might be related to the study device.

Detailed description

The study in question is a post market clinical follow-up study to follow-up the safety and performance of the bioabsorbable headless Inion CompressOn Screw in fracture fixation operations of the ankle, knee and elbow of pediatric and adolescent patients. The main focus of the study in terms of performance is to follow-up the bone healing/ossification of operated areas. The main focus of the study in terms of safety is to evaluate the occurrence of adverse events and required revision surgeries that are or might be related to the study device. The Inion CompressOn™ Screws are cannulated headless compression screws made of degradable co-polymers composed of L-lactic acid and D-lactic acid. These polymers have a long history of safe medical use and they degrade in vivo by hydrolysis into alpha-hydroxyacids that are metabolised by the body. The screws retain their initial strength up to 12 weeks after implantation and gradually lose their strength thereafter. Bioabsorption takes place within four years. The clinical data collection acquired from this study is a requirement of the EU Notified Body as part of the admitted CE mark certification, in cases when the device is initially approved based on the clinical data of an equivalent device. In this case, the equivalent device has been Inion FreedomScrew, which is made of the same material composition and is used for the same indications. Inion CompressOn Screw has new design features such as headless design, and threading which allows compression to the fracture line. Also new sizes have been introduced. The study recruits 80 pediatric/adolescent patients who meet the acceptance criteria and have signed the informed consent. The follow-up time for each study patient is 4 years. Each patient has 6 follow-up time points related to the study. These time points consist of: 1. screening visit (-180-0 days before operation), 2. operation (day 0), 3. post-operative follow-up 1 (4-8 weeks), 4. post-operative follow-up 2 (3 months after operation +/- 3 weeks), 5. post-operative follow-up 3 (2 years after operation +/- 2 months) 6. post-operative follow-up 4 (4 years after operation +/- 4 months) The first 4 time points are within standard care, the last 2 time points (post-operative follow-up 3 and post-operative follow-up 4) are scheduled for study purposes only to be able to gain performance and safety data based on adequate follow-up time. The study is a single center single group study which is conducted in Turku University Hospital (TYKS) in Finland.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEFracture fixation operationFracture fixation operation in using bioabsorbable headless Inion CompressOn Screw/s according to instructions for use

Timeline

Start date
2026-04-01
Primary completion
2032-02-01
Completion
2032-12-01
First posted
2026-03-16
Last updated
2026-03-18

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Finland

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07473947. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.