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Study design: Two consecutive prospective case series. Study population: Part 1 will enroll 10 healthy volunteers (50 years or older). Part 2 will enroll 10 elderly patients (50 years or older) with a dorsally displaced distal radius fracture (AO type 23-A-C) that is acceptably reduced. In both parts, participants should have no restrictions in activities of daily living pre-fracture and no evident anatomical difference between both wrists.
Intervention:
Part 1: Participants will wear the brace continuously for one week. Part 2: Participants will wear the brace as treatment of the fracture for five weeks (instead of a plaster cast).
Main study parameters/endpoints: In parts 1 and 2, the primary outcome measure will be a Visual Analog Scale (VAS) score for wearing comfort. Secondary outcome measures are the occurrence of fracture redislocation (part 2 only), pain (VAS), inconvenience during NL61002.078.17 / DRFB-Tolerability Distal Radius Fracture Brace Tolerability Version number: 1.1, d.d. April 24, 2017 8 of 34 activities of daily living (Katz Index), and adverse reactions like pain, skin pressure, skin irritation/redness, sensibility issues, or device-related problems.
Full description
Rationale: Each year, approximately 34,500 adults in The Netherlands sustain a fracture of the distal radius (wrist fracture). Incidence peaks in the elderly. The currently preferred treatment is closed reduction and nonoperative treatment by immobilization in a plaster cast for 4-6 weeks. Surgery is only performed if closed reduction fails or redislocation occurs. Plaster immobilization is inconvenient and interferes with daily activities. More importantly, standard nonoperative treatment often fails; in 40-60% of the fractures, redislocation requires surgery. Surgical treatment is about 9 times more expensive than nonoperative treatment and not without risks. This project aims to develop an innovative nonoperative treatment option. The central idea is to produce a 3D-printed brace for the fractured wrist using a mirrored CT-scan of the contralateral, unfractured wrist as a model. This innovative approach has the advantage that it does not depend on surgery and provides a better and potentially more durable positioning than the currently applied plaster cast. We expect that redislocation will occur less frequently, so surgery may be avoided. In contrast to a traditional plaster cast, the newly developed brace is water resistant/repellant, lighter, and enables movement of the hand. It enables daily activities and improves independency in the elderly with a wrist fracture. The treatment has been successfully evaluated in an ex vivo model. The clinical implementation will follow a step-wise approach.
Objective: Part 1 aims to determine the tolerability of the 3D-printed brace when worn by healthy volunteers (50 years of order), performing their normal daily activities. In part 2, the objective is to determine tolerability of the 3D-printed brace in patients (50 years or older) with an extra-articular distal radius fracture with dorsal displacement, performing their normal daily activities.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Part 1:
Part 2:
Patients (50 years or older) with an acute**, unilateral distal radius fracture with dorsal displacement (AO type 23-A, B, or C) that is acceptably reduced (by simple closed reduction with vertical longitudinal traction)
No restrictions in activities of daily living pre-fracture*
Signed informed consent by patient
Exclusion criteria
Part 1:
Part 2:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
15 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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