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Fixation of the Posterior Malleolus in Trimalleolar AO Weber C Fractures. (POSTFIX-C)

M

Medical Center Haaglanden

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Open Reduction and Internal Fixation
AO Weber C Fractures
Trimalleolar Fracture
Syndesmotic Stability

Treatments

Device: NO Fixation
Device: Fixation

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02599285
NL50169.098.15

Details and patient eligibility

About

In AO Weber type C fractures, there is a combination of a proximal fibular fracture, a medial fracture or ruptured deltoid ligament, and a syndesmotic injury. Anatomical repair and reduction of the syndesmosis is essential to prevent diastasis in the ankle-joint. Widening and chronical instability of the syndesmosis is related to worse functional outcome and development of posttraumatic osteoarthritis in the ankle. There is limited biomechanical and clinical evidence that syndesmotic stability in AO Weber type C fractures with an additional posterior malleolar fracture can also be reached by fixation of the posterior malleolar fragment. Maybe, this is even superior to the usual treatment with syndesmotic positioning screws. Some authors concluded that stability of the syndesmosis in these fractures can be much more achieved by fixation of the posterior malleolar fragment than by placement of syndesmotic positioning screws alone. Another additional benefit of open reduction and fixation of the posterior malleolar fragment is that this will lead to an anatomical reconstruction of the syndesmosis. Although there is no current evidence, it is likely that a malreduction of the fibula in the tibial incisura will lead to a worse functional outcome on the long-term. No clear consensus in the literature is found as to which fragment size of the posterior malleolus should be internally fixed. The general opinion is that displaced fragments that involve more than 25% of the distal articular tibia should be fixed. Traditionally, reduction of these larger fragments is indirectly, followed by percutaneous screw fixation in anterior-posterior direction. Disadvantages are that it is hard to achieve an anatomical reduction, and that percutaneous fixation of smaller fragments is very difficult. Recently, a direct exposure of the posterior tibia via a posterolateral approach in prone position, followed by open reduction and fixation with screws in posterior-anterior direction or antiglide plate is advocated by several authors. This approach allows perfect visualization of the fracture, articular anatomical reduction, and strong fixation. Another advantage is that even small posterior fragments can be addressed. Several case series are published, which describe minimal major wound complications, good functional outcomes, and minimal need for reoperation.

Enrollment

54 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Age between 18 and 70 years
  2. First ankle fracture of the affected side
  3. Isolated, fibular fracture proximal to the syndesmosis with a posterior malleolar fragment between 5 and 25% of the involved articular surface(AO type 44-C1, 44-C2, 44-C3).

Exclusion criteria

  1. Multiple injuries
  2. Ankle fracture of the same ankle in the history
  3. Patients with pre-existent mobility problems
  4. Pre-existent disability like wheelchair or walking aid dependency.
  5. Patients living in another region of whom follow-up will take place in another hospital
  6. Insufficient understanding of the Dutch language

Trial design

54 participants in 2 patient groups

Fixation
Description:
Patients with a trimalleolar AO Weber C fracture with open reduction and fixation of the posterior malleolar fragment.
Treatment:
Device: Fixation
No Fixation
Description:
Patients with a trimalleolar AO Weber C fracture without open reduction and fixation of the posterior malleolar fragment.
Treatment:
Device: NO Fixation

Trial contacts and locations

4

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Central trial contact

Sander Verhage, Drs.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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