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Is Casting of Displaced Pediatric Distal Forearm Fractures Non-inferior to Reduction in General Anesthesia? (CASTING)

Z

Zealand University Hospital

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Distal Radius Fracture
Distal Forearm Fracture

Treatments

Procedure: Non-surgical treatment
Procedure: Surgical treatment

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05736068
REG-099-2022

Details and patient eligibility

About

Treatment of displaced distal forearm fractures (DFF) in children have traditionally been closed reduction and pin fixation, although they might heal and remodel without manipulation, with no functional impairment. No randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have been published comparing the patient-reported functional outcome after non-surgical and surgical treatment of displaced DFF in children.

This is a multicentre RCT. The aim of the trial is to investigate the patient-reported functional outcome after non-surgical treatment of displaced distal forearm fractures (DFF) in children. We will include 44 children aged 4-10 years with a displaced DFF. They will be offered inclusion, if the on-duty orthopedic surgeon finds indication for surgical intervention. If the parents/guardians consent to participate, the children will be allocated equally to non-surgical treatment (intervention) or surgical treatment of surgeon's choice (comparator). We will follow the children during one year, where they will be seen after 4 weeks, 3, 6 and 12 months. The primary outcome is the between-group difference in 12 months Quick Disabilities Arm Shoulder and Hand (QuickDASH) score.

Full description

Pediatric distal forearm fractures (DFF) are very common and accounts for 25-30% of all fractures in children.(1,2) Up to half of all pediatric DFF are displaced to an extent where surgery has been the preferred treatment option.(3) However, surgery does come with a cost.

The most common treatment of displaced pediatric DFF has long been closed reduction with or without pin fixation (or in rare cases plate and screw fixation) under general anesthesia, followed by immobilization in a cast.(4) Pin-related complications vary from 4-23%, depending on what is reported as complications,(5-11) and up to 40% has been reported when including re-displacements.(12) The insertion of a metal wire or plate also requires subsequent procedures to remove these implants again.

Numerous small cohort studies and case series have found pin fixation advantageous in achieving anatomic reduction and avoiding re-displacement.(5-11) However, whether anatomic reduction and stabilization is important regarding the patient-reported functional outcome has not been investigated since most studies use only radiographic or objective measures (e.g. range of motion). In addition, children's bones, and in particular the metaphysis and epiphysis, have a unique ability to heal and remodel throughout the growth period until puberty.(13) Almost 20 years ago, Do et al. (14) stated that "the tremendous capacity of distal metaphyseal radius fractures to heal and remodel makes this one of the most rewarding fractures to treat non-operatively. [...]". In accordance with Do et al., other studies indicate that displaced DFF fractures in prepubertal children might heal without manipulation, and that most displaced fractures will remodel within a year or two to almost anatomical position with no functional impairment.(14-17) Although most surgeons are aware that children's bones have this remodeling potential, they still find it challenging to deal with the uncertainty of whether the bone will actually remodel to an acceptable position. Furthermore, surgeons might have difficulties with how families will react to the waiting time until the misaligned arm looks normal again.

If non-surgical treatment of displaced pediatric DFF were more common, the costs associated with surgery could be minimized. Unfortunately, there is limited evidence to guide the decision to operate or not. The available studies are typically small, retrospective cohort studies or case series of low quality with no predefined follow-up or outcome measures. To our knowledge, there are no published randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comparing non-surgical treatment with surgical treatment, and no studies report outcomes from the patient's perspective.

The aim of this trial is to investigate the patient-reported functional outcome after non-surgical treatment of displaced DFF in children aged 4-10 years. Our hypothesis is, that casting without manipulation is non-inferior to surgical treatment.

Enrollment

40 patients

Sex

All

Ages

4 to 10 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Children 4-10 years of age with open physes

  • Fractures in the distal metaphyseal radius (with or without concomitant ulna fracture), including extraarticular physeal fractures (SH I-II)

    • Overriding fractures
    • Angulated fractures of 20-40°
  • The on-duty surgeon finds reduction under anesthesia with or without fixation indicated

Exclusion criteria

  • Open fractures
  • Nerve or vascular affection
  • All intraarticular fractures including SH III-V
  • Ulnar physeal fractures
  • Polytrauma
  • Concomitant ipsi- or contralateral upper extremity fractures (except distal ulna fracture)
  • Pathologic fractures
  • The injury is >7 days old
  • Other conditions that may affect bone healing

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

40 participants in 2 patient groups

Non-surgical
Experimental group
Description:
No reduction. Application of a cast.
Treatment:
Procedure: Non-surgical treatment
Surgical
Active Comparator group
Description:
Closed reduction under general anesthesia with or without additional pin fixation of surgeons' choice followed by cast immobilization.
Treatment:
Procedure: Surgical treatment

Trial contacts and locations

4

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Central trial contact

Peter Buxbom, MD PhD; Katrine R. Abildgaard, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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