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Efficacy Study of Selective Tibial Neurotomy in the Treatment of the Spastic Equinovarus Foot Among Adult Hemiplegic Patients

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Cliniques universitaires Saint-Luc- Université Catholique de Louvain

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 3

Conditions

Stroke
Spastic Equinovarus Foot

Treatments

Procedure: Selective tibial neurotomy
Drug: Botulinum toxin injection

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00825097
READ-Bollens-01

Details and patient eligibility

About

Spastic equinovarus foot (SEF) is a major cause of disability in stroke patients. Treatments may include physical therapy, orthosis, botulinum toxin (BTX) injections and selective neurotomy.

Several RCT placebo-controlled studies have demonstrated improvement in spasticity, in pain and in active ankle dorsiflexion after BTX injections.

Unfortunately, BTX is an expensive treatment and its effects last about three months.

Selective neurotomy consists in a partial section of the motor nerve innervating spastic muscles responsible for the SEF, leading to a permanent treatment of the SEF.

Until now, neurotomy has only been assessed by observational case-report studies and has never been submitted to a RCT.

The aim of our study is to evaluate the benefits of selective tibial neurotomy in case of SEF according to the 3 domains of the ICF, by comparing it with BTX injections, among a prospective, randomized, controlled single blind study: it would allow to promote a permanent and cost-effective treatment in case of SEF.

Full description

INTRODUCTION

Stroke is the third cause of death and the leading cause of handicap among industrialized countries (1). Spasticity following stroke is responsible for spastic equinovarus foot (SEF) in 18% of cases (2). Spastic equinovarus foot is due to spasticity (muscle hypertonia) of the calf muscles (soleus, gastrocnemius and tibialis posterior), often complicated by contracture and by the weakness of peroneus longus and peroneus brevis muscles (3). Therefore, stroke patients walk slowly, and often require assistive device as orthosis or canes. This disability limits their social participation and their quality of life.

Spastic equinovarus foot treatments include oral medications, physical therapy, orthosis, chemical denervations (botulinum toxin, alcohol or phenol injections), selective neurotomy and orthopedic surgery (4, 5). Intra-muscular botulinum toxin injection induces a chemical denervation reducing spasticity of injected muscles. Functional block of the neuromuscular junction due to botulinum toxin is reversible and lasts about 3 months. Therefore, this expensive treatment must regularly be administered, with a risk of antibodies development. Selective neurotomy is a neurosurgical procedure consisting in partially and selectively cutting motor branches innervating the spastic muscles. For a low cost, it can permanently reduce muscle spasticity.

Botulinum toxin injection effectiveness has largely been demonstrated in spastic equinovarus foot treatment by double-blind randomised controlled trials against placebo (6, 7, 8). Selective tibial nerve neurotomy effectiveness has only been suggested in spastic equinovarus foot treatment by uncontrolled and unrandomised case reports (9, 10, 11).

International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) of the World Health Organisation (www.who.int / icidh, 2001) is the framework of the Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine (12). This model describes how a disease can influence patient impairments, activity and participation. Spastic equinovarus foot treatments have already been evaluated in the impairments field: spasticity, muscle strength, walking parameters and gait analysis variables. These treatments should also demonstrate their effectiveness on the patient activity (disability) and on his participation (quality of life).

OBJECTIVES

The aim of the present project is to study the effectiveness of selective tibial nerve neurotomy on the spastic equinovarus foot, by comparing it with botulinum toxin injection. The functional assessment will explore the three ICF domains.

METHODS

We will recruit 20 chronic stroke patients presenting with spastic equinovarus foot. This spastic equinovarus foot will be due to calf muscles spasticity without contracture. This spasticity will not have been managed effectively by physical therapy.

First, a lidocaïne selective diagnostic motor branch block will systematically be carried out to confirm the treatment indication, and to determine the muscles and / or nerves to treat (14). Once the muscles responsible for the spastic equinovarus foot will be identified, they will surgically or chemically be denervated.

Than, patients will be randomized in two groups:

  • One group receiving botulinum toxin injections (toxin group).
  • One group undergoing a neurotomy (neurotomy group).

Patients will be assessed before treatment, 2 months and 6 months after treatment among the 3 ICF domains. Impairments will be assessed by the Stoke Impairment Assessment Set (SIAS), the Ashworth and Tardieu scales (spasticity) and the MRC scale (muscle strength). Spasticity and gait disorders will quantitatively and objectively be evaluated by the muscle stiffness measurement (15) and an instrumented gait analysis (11). Disability will be evaluated by the ABILOCO scale (16) and the participation (quality of life) by the StrokeQol scale (17) and the SF-36 questionnaire.

The patients selection, the lidocaïne hyperselective diagnostic blocks, the botulinum toxin injections and the selective neurotomies will be achieved at Cliniques universitaires Mont-Godinne. The functional assessment (clinical evaluation, gait analysis, muscle stiffness measurement) will be achieved in the Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation department (READ unit) by a blinded assessor.

PERSPECTIVE

From this study, we hope to demonstrate the effectiveness of the selective neurotomy in spastic equinovarus foot treatment among the 3 ICF domains (impairment, activity and participation). This should promote this effective, permanent and cheap spastic equinovarus foot treatment.

Enrollment

16 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Chronic stroke patients (more than 6 months after stroke)
  • SEF due to spasticity of the calf muscles
  • Positive effects of lidocaïne selective motor nerve block
  • No associated tendinosous retraction: ankle dorsiflexion ≥ 0°after block
  • Insufficient benefit of adaptated kinesitherapy
  • Gait ability allowing an instrumented gait analysis

Exclusion criteria

  • Pregnant women
  • BTX injection in the lower limb during the 6 months before inclusion
  • BTX injection in another limb during the 6 months before inclusion
  • patients unable to walk without orthosis on a treadmill

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

16 participants in 2 patient groups

Neurotomy Group
Experimental group
Description:
8 patients undergoing a selective tibial neurotomy under general anesthesia
Treatment:
Procedure: Selective tibial neurotomy
BTX Group
Active Comparator group
Description:
8 patients undergoing a botulinum toxin injection in the calf muscles under EMG-control
Treatment:
Drug: Botulinum toxin injection

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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