Health Care of the Older People Division, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust, Nottingham, UK.
School of Health Sciences, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
BMJ Open. 2019 Jul 10;9(7):e032111. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-032111.
Pelvic fragility fractures (PFF) are common in older people and associated with a significant burden of mortality and morbidity. This is related to the challenges of appropriate pain control and early mobilisation. The current standard for treatment of PFF is non-surgical management. Minimally invasive surgical techniques for sacral fracture stabilisation have been shown to improve outcomes in terms of pain control and mobility, and they are safe. Randomised controlled trials are required before recommendations can be made for surgical management of PFF to become the new standard of care. This feasibility study will explore several uncertainties around conducting such a trial.
ASSERT (Acute Sacral inSufficiEncy fractuRe augmenTation) is a single-site randomised controlled, parallel-arm, feasibility trial of surgical stabilisation versus non-surgical management of acute sacral fragility fractures in people aged 70 years and over. Patients will be randomised to either surgical or non-surgical group on a 1:1 ratio. Follow-up of participants will occur at 2, 4 and 12 weeks with safety data collected at 52 weeks. Primary objectives are to determine feasibility and design of a future trial, including outcomes on recruitment, adherence to randomisation and safety. This will be supplemented with a qualitative interview study of participants and clinicians. Secondary objectives will inform study design procedures to determine clinical and economic outcomes between groups, including scored questionnaires, analgesia requirements, resource use and quality of life data. Data analysis will be largely descriptive to inform outcomes and future sample size.
Ethical approval was granted by the North East Newcastle and North Tyneside 2 Research Ethics Committee (reference 18/NE/0212). ASSERT was approved and sponsored by Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust (reference 18HC001) and the Health Research Authority (reference IRAS 232791). Recruitment is ongoing. Results will be presented at relevant conferences and submitted to appropriate journals on study completion.
ISRCTN16719542; Pre-results.
骨盆脆弱性骨折(PFF)在老年人中很常见,与死亡率和发病率有很大关系。这与适当的疼痛控制和早期活动的挑战有关。目前 PFF 的治疗标准是非手术治疗。骶骨骨折稳定的微创外科技术已被证明可以改善疼痛控制和活动能力方面的结果,并且是安全的。在建议将 PFF 的手术治疗作为新的护理标准之前,需要进行随机对照试验。这项可行性研究将探讨进行此类试验的几个不确定性。
ASSERT(急性骶骨不足骨折增强)是一项单站点随机对照、平行臂、可行性试验,研究了 70 岁及以上急性骶骨脆弱性骨折的手术稳定与非手术治疗的效果。患者将按照 1:1 的比例随机分配到手术组或非手术组。参与者将在第 2、4 和 12 周进行随访,并在第 52 周收集安全性数据。主要目标是确定未来试验的可行性和设计,包括招募、随机分组的依从性和安全性方面的结果。这将辅以对参与者和临床医生的定性访谈研究。次要目标将为确定组间的临床和经济结果提供研究设计程序,包括评分问卷、镇痛需求、资源利用和生活质量数据。数据分析主要是描述性的,以了解结果和未来的样本量。
伦理批准由东北纽卡斯尔和北泰恩赛德 2 研究伦理委员会(参考号 18/NE/0212)授予。ASSERT 由诺丁汉大学医院 NHS 信托基金(参考号 18HC001)和卫生研究管理局(参考号 IRAS 232791)批准和赞助。正在进行招募。结果将在相关会议上公布,并在研究完成后提交给合适的期刊。
ISRCTN85563166;预结果。