Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Adolescent idiopathic scoliosis is a deformation of the spine affecting 2 to 4% of under 18 years old population. This can have severe physical or psychological impact during adulthood. The deformation causes mechanical constraints resulting in early osteoarthritis, which results in adulthood disability.
There is also an impact on the respiratory function in most severe cases of idiopathic scoliosis. Adolescents affected by a scoliosis with an angle of 40° of more undergo a surgery called posterior fusion during adolescence to limit these impacts.
In France, more than 1000 adolescent patients undergo a surgery called posterior spinal fusion for their severe scoliosis.
This aims to straighten the spine by bone grafting all the vertebras included in the scoliosis. Two metal rods are implanted to favour osteosynthesis of the straight spine.
This intervention suffer of a bad image and worries the patients and their parents, as it needs metal implants near the spinal cord.
The worry comes from the most severe complication that may happen exceptionally following this surgery, which is a definitive paraplegia. The scar is quite large and the surgery reduces the mobility of a part of the spine. The intervention produces a quite large haemorrhage, which leads to a diminution in haemoglobin level, resulting in a fatigue during the following weeks.
On the following days, the patient will need a specific protocol of pain management including morphine-based and anti-inflammatory drugs.
This intervention will often require a 5 to 7 days hospitalization with a 1 to 2 month convalescence period at home or in rehabilitation centre.
This intervention is performed on adolescent patients without comorbidities. Moreover, the surgical approach is not profound passing between the para-vertebral muscles with no close large blood vessels or major organs. The pain is caused by correction tensions and the access to the vertebras during the surgery.
Surgical techniques have considerably evolved allowing shorter interventions and to reduce the loss of blood.
The association between morphine-based treatments and grade I analgesics enables an effective pain management.
This intervention appears to perfectly suit to an enhanced recovery after surgery procedure (ERAS).
ERAS is a set of procedure meant to enhance its tolerance and to reduce its morbidity and the hospitalization duration after surgery and the recovery duration.
ERAS is well developed in adult patients undergoing surgery, it is also well described in paediatric patient especially on adolescent scoliosis surgeries.
As the pain is well controlled during the hospitalization as well when the patient get back home, there are very few obstacles to an ERAS procedure in this indication for a patient without comorbidities.
Numerous articles report experiences of medical staff with ERAS protocols.
Generally, the set of measures includes:
No studies evaluate the patients' quality of life or follow the patient for more than 6 months after surgery (limiting the assessment of long term complications e.g. infectious complications).
The link between hospital staff and the patient after his return back home is not described as well.
This research project aims to confirm with a robust scientific approach that ERAS protocols in idiopathic scoliosis in adolescents allow to reduce the duration of hospitalization compared to standard of care procedures while improving quality of life after surgery.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
316 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Meriem El JANI; Vincent CUNIN
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal