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A Norwegian Trial Comparing Treatment Strategies for Carpal Tunnel Syndrome (NOR-CACTUS)

D

Diakonhjemmet Hospital

Status and phase

Enrolling
Phase 4

Conditions

Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

Treatments

Drug: Injection, Triamcinolone Hexacetonide, Per 5 Mg
Procedure: Surgical carpal tunnel release

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05306548
DIA2021-8

Details and patient eligibility

About

Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) causes numbness and pain in the hand and arm, and is an important cause of work absence and disability. The aim of the NOR-CACTUS Trial is to compare outcomes of a treatment strategy where the initial treatment is up to two ultrasound-guided corticosteroid injections, followed by scheduled clinical assessment of treatment effect, and subsequent surgery if needed, to a treatment strategy where surgery is the first-line treatment. Participants will be randomized to one of the treatment strategies, and followed up for two years after start of the study intervention. Outcomes will include patient-reported, clinical, functional and neurophysiological measures, and health-economic aspects. The hypothesis of the study is that there is no difference between the two treatment groups in the percentage of patients with a satisfactory symptom relief (treatment success) one year after the initial therapeutic intervention.

Full description

CTS is the most common non-traumatic hand disorder, prevalent in approximately 4% of the adult population. The condition may have a substantial impact on an individual's quality of life, ability to accomplish activities of daily living, and to perform occupational duties. Associated healthcare costs represent a significant socioeconomic burden.

Currently, many patients with mild and moderate CTS treated surgically without a preceding trial of less invasive non-surgical therapies. An increase in the use of non-surgical first-line therapies (e.g. corticosteroid injection into the carpal tunnel), while reserving surgery for refractory cases, aim to optimize the trade-off between treatment risk and benefit, while also ensuring appropriate use of health resources. However, there is a lack of studies directly comparing the efficacy of corticosteroid injections to surgery, and the long-term safety of corticosteroid injections has not been investigated.

It is not well-known if patients who are initially treated with corticosteroid injections will eventually need to proceed to surgery, and therefore may have to endure the symptoms for a longer period of time, with potentially worse long-term outcomes, compared to patients who has surgery as first-line treatment. On the other hand, it is not beneficial if patients are unnecessarily exposed to the risks associated with surgery, if symptoms could have been satisfactory resolved with a non-surgical method.

The current study will assess if first-line treatment with up to two ultrasound-guided corticosteroid injections is non-inferior to surgery with regards to treatment success. A less invasive treatment approach might result in important benefits to the patient, e.g. less pain, reduced risk of complications, and faster return to work and activities. This might also be of importance to family members, as many CTS patients are at an age where they have care responsibilities. Non-surgical treatments might benefit society by decreasing work absence and reducing health expenditure, and allowing better access to surgical services for other patient groups. High quality documentation is needed to provide a base for future treatment guidelines. Evidence based clinical guidelines provide treatment decision support and help reduce national and regional differences in treatment practices, and ensure that all patients have equal access to evidence-based treatment.

In the NOR-CACTUS trial, adult individuals with idiopathic CTS of a mild-to-moderate degree will be randomized to receive either A) Primary open surgical carpal tunnel release, or B) Up to two ultrasound-guided corticosteroid (triamcinolone hexacetonide) injections in the carpal tunnel, and subsequent open surgical carpal tunnel release in case of unsatisfactory treatment result. Participants will be randomized to receive one of the treatment strategies, and followed for two years, with the primary endpoint being successful treatment result one year after start of the intervention.

The hypothesis of the study is that the percentage of patients with a satisfactory symptom relief (treatment success) one year after the initial therapeutic intervention in the injection treatment strategy arm is non-inferior to that of the surgery treatment arm. The primary outcome is based on the disease-specific patient-reported outcome Boston Carpal Tunnel Questionnaire (BCTQ) symptom severity scale (SSS). Further outcomes will include other patient-reported, clinical, functional and neurophysiological measures, and health-economic aspects.

Enrollment

258 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Adult (≥18 years of age)

  2. Patient history indicating CTS

  3. Neurophysiological examination performed within 6 months

  4. Diagnosis of CTS based on:

    1. Classic/probable or possible symptoms, and neurophysiological findings consistent with CTS

      Or, in case of normal neurophysiological findings:

    2. Classic/probable symptoms and positive physical exam findings and/or nighttime symptoms

  5. Mild to moderate symptoms (intermittent, interfering with everyday life, and/or disturb sleep)

Exclusion criteria

  1. Previous CTS surgery or corticosteroid injection in the carpal tunnel in the relevant hand
  2. Diagnosis of severe CTS, based on history and examination indicating severe CTS with constant symptoms including pain, loss of sensibility, dexterity or reduced temperature sensation, weakness of thumb abduction and opposition, or atrophy of thenar musculature. Disappearance of pain may indicate permanent sensory loss.
  3. History suggesting underlying causes of CTS e.g. inflammatory wrist arthritis and/or flexor tenosynovitis
  4. Previous significant trauma or fracture, deformity or tumor in the wrist or hand in the relevant hand
  5. Presence of conditions affecting a normal nerve function e.g. cervical disc herniation, polyneuropathy or previous nerve injury
  6. Major co-morbidities, such as severe malignancies, severe or uncontrolled infections, uncontrollable hypertension, severe cardiovascular disease (NYHA class III or IV) and/or severe respiratory diseases, severe renal failure, active ulcus ventriculi, leukopenia and/or thrombocytopenia
  7. Severe psychiatric or mental disorders
  8. Local infection or wound in the affected hand/wrist
  9. Any other medical condition that according to the treating physician and/or local guidelines makes adherence to treatment protocol impossible
  10. Inadequate birth control1, pregnancy2, and/or breastfeeding (current at screening or planned within the duration of the study)
  11. Known hypersensitivity to Triamcinolone Hexacetonide (Lederspan) or any of the excipients (sorbitol, polysorbate or benzyl alcohol)
  12. Concomitant therapy with CYP3A-inhibitors or digitalis glycosides
  13. Patients vaccinated or immunized with live virus vaccines within 2 weeks of treatment
  14. Alcohol or other substance abuse
  15. Language barriers
  16. Other factors which make adherence to study protocol impossible

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

258 participants in 2 patient groups

Surgery treatment strategy
Active Comparator group
Description:
Primary open surgical carpal tunnel release. Treatment effect is monitored on scheduled follow-up visits. Re-operation may be performed if medically indicated (e.g. postoperative complication, or failure of the primary procedure)
Treatment:
Procedure: Surgical carpal tunnel release
Injection treatment strategy
Experimental group
Description:
Primary treatment with ultrasound-guided corticosteroid injection. Treatment effect is monitored on scheduled follow-up visits. One additional injection may be administered, and subsequently surgical carpal tunnel release is performed in case of unsatisfactory treatment effect of the injection therapy. Treatment effect is graded on a 5-leve scale by subject from 1 (complete improvement) to 5 (severe worsening) of symptoms. Incomplete improvement (score 2 or higher) results in a second injection or secondary surgery.
Treatment:
Procedure: Surgical carpal tunnel release
Drug: Injection, Triamcinolone Hexacetonide, Per 5 Mg

Trial contacts and locations

5

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Central trial contact

Siri Lillegraven, MD, MPH, PhD; Ulf G Sundin, MD, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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