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Cast Vs Splint in Distal Radius Fractures

N

National University Health System (NUHS)

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Distal Radius Fracture

Treatments

Procedure: Cast vs Splint

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05159310
2019/00510

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study will evaluate and compare the efficacy of 2 commonly-used methods of fracture immobilisation: (1) Fiberglass cast, and (2) Thermoplastic splint. Both these devices are externally applied and provide pain relief while immobilising the fracture in an acceptable position. Casts and splints are both established devices in routine clinical use.

Full description

Casts and splints are both established methods of treating DRF. Casts have been traditionally the gold standard for non-operative care of fractures, but there are distinct disadvantages such as skin rash and pruritus, malodour, skin maceration and loosening as the initial swelling subsides. Casts require specialized tools for removal and they have to be reapplied by specialized staff if the casts become loose or wet. Splints have the advantage of being removable and therefore facilitate hygiene and provide a better fit because of the adjustable straps. Splints are theoretically less rigid and patient non-compliance because of the ease of removal may result in a greater likelihood of fracture displacement. However, it is known that fractures displace even in casts and the efficacy of casts at maintaining reduction over splints has not been established. Moreover, it has been clearly shown that the elderly patients have good functional outcomes that do not correlate with the position in which the fracture heals i.e. they tolerated a large degree of fracture malunion (Arora; Egol).

The primary goal of this study is to show that there is no difference in the final functional outcome between distal radius fractures treated non-operatively with splints and casts. The secondary goals are to demonstrate: (1) splinting results in greater patient comfort and acceptance; (2) there is no significant difference in final radiographic outcomes between DRF treated with casts and splints; and (3) there is no difference in clinical outcome at the 6-month and 12-month follow-up points.

This study is clinically important for several reasons. First, patients may be encouraged to use splints instead of casts if there is no difference in functional outcome and the former provide better comfort. Second, patients may not be required to present for long (>6-month) follow-ups if it can be shown that the clinical improvement plateaus at 6 months after injury. This is consistent with our aim to improve patients' overall quality of life after musculoskeletal injuries and forms a core component of functional ageing.

Enrollment

300 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

60+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Closed DRF in patients > 60 years
  • Presenting to HRMC within 10 days of injury
  • Isolated injury
  • With or without M&R performed in EMD
  • Declined surgical fixation after appropriate discussion

Exclusion criteria

  • Wounds - skin tears, bad abrasions, open fracture
  • Ulnar fracture > styloid
  • Other MSK / non-MSK injuries
  • Bilateral fractures
  • Prior wrist fractures / wrist surgery
  • Other upper limb conditions affecting function (e.g. CVA)
  • Cognitive impairment
  • Allergy to plaster or fiberglass

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

300 participants in 2 patient groups

Cast
Other group
Description:
Patients presenting with DRF will be screened by the attending consultant. The temporary backslab will be removed, X-rays will be obtained, and the attending consultant will discuss the treatment options. Patients who are planned for non-operative treatment and meet the inclusion criteria will be eligible for the study. The purpose and details of the study will be explained and informed consent will then be taken by the research coordinator (RC). The participants will then be randomized (using a block-randomization method) to either treatment by splint or cast. A research assistant will facilitate the randomisation process so that the RC and the treating physician remain blinded to treatment allocation.
Treatment:
Procedure: Cast vs Splint
Splint
Other group
Description:
Patients presenting with DRF will be screened by the attending consultant. The temporary backslab will be removed, X-rays will be obtained, and the attending consultant will discuss the treatment options. Patients who are planned for non-operative treatment and meet the inclusion criteria will be eligible for the study. The purpose and details of the study will be explained and informed consent will then be taken by the research coordinator (RC). The participants will then be randomized (using a block-randomization method) to either treatment by splint or cast. A research assistant will facilitate the randomisation process so that the RC and the treating physician remain blinded to treatment allocation.
Treatment:
Procedure: Cast vs Splint

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Vanessa Wan

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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