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Percutaneous Autologous Bone-marrow Grafting for Open Tibial Shaft Fracture (IMOCA)

R

Regional University Hospital Center (CHRU)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Fractures, Open
Tibial Fractures

Treatments

Procedure: Osteosynthesis

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00512434
PHRN/06/PR/IMOCA
ID RCB 2007 - A00032 - 51 (Other Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The treatment of open tibial shaft fracture is often complicated by delayed union or non-union. The objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of autologous concentrated bone-marrow to accelerate healing of open tibial shaft fractures and to reduce the need for secondary intervention.

In a prospective, randomized, controlled, single-blind study, 186 patients with an open tibial will be randomized to receive either the standard of care (fixation by nail or external fixator and routine soft-tissue management), or the standard of care with percutaneous injection, one month after fracture, of autologous concentrated bone-marrow. Randomization will be stratified by severity of the open wound. The primary outcome measure will be the proportion of patients requiring secondary intervention because of delayed union or nonunion within twelve months post-fracture.

Full description

This study will be conducted at 13 University Hospitals in France. The protocol has been approved by the institutional review board. After written informed consent, patients will be randomized, in the days after the fracture in 2 groups of 93 patients : 1) the control group (standard of care only: fixation by nail or external fixator and routine soft-tissue management) and 2) the study group (standard of care with percutaneous injection, one month after fracture, of autologous concentrated bone-marrow). Randomization will be stratified by severity of the open wound and by center. For the wound, strata A comprise Gustilo-Anderson types I, II and III-A and strata B, type III-B.

For the study group, the injection is scheduled at 1 month ± 5 days after the fracture. The techniques have been described by Hernigou (J Bone Joint Surg Am, 2006; 88(sup 1 part 2): 322-327). There are 3 steps: marrow aspiration (300 - 500 g) from iliac crest under general anesthesia, centrifugation in cell therapy unit to obtain a concentrated buffy coat of about 50 ml containing progenitor cells and other mononuclear cells, percutaneous injection in the fracture site of 20-30 ml of the buffy coat under fluoroscopy control.

Apart from the injection, the standard of care is the same for the 2 groups. Patients will be followed for 12 months, with assessments at 1, 2, 3, 6, 9 and 12 months.

All analysis will be based on the intent to treat the population. The primary outcome measure will be the proportion of patients requiring secondary intervention because of delayed union or nonunion within twelve months post fracture. An independent panel of surgeons will evaluate all secondary procedure with the potential of promoting fracture-healing.

An independent evaluation of fracture union will be conducted by a radiology panel blinded to treatment allocation and all other patient data.

An outcome will be considered to be successful when the fracture heal, according to the investigator, without secondary intervention and is radiographically united during patient follow-up.

Enrollment

85 patients

Sex

All

Ages

17+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age 17 years or more
  • Open tibial shaft fracture with Gustilo-Anderson type I, II, III A or B
  • Written informed consent
  • Affiliated to French Social Security

Exclusion criteria

  • Circumferential bone loss
  • Vascular or nerve injury
  • Injury, other than tibial fracture, interfering with weight bearing
  • Infection (skin, soft-tissue or bone)
  • Disease or treatment interfering with bone union: head injury with coma, pathologic fracture
  • Medical history on iliac wing contraindicating bone-marrow aspiration
  • Corticoid or immunosuppressive therapy more than one week
  • Pregnancy at the day of inclusion in study
  • History of positive serology for HIV1+2, HBs, HCV
  • Adult in the care of a guardian
  • Impossibility to meet at the appointments for the follow-up

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

85 participants in 2 patient groups

Control in arm fields
Active Comparator group
Description:
Standard treatment Intervention no'Osteosynthesis'
Treatment:
Procedure: Osteosynthesis
IMOCA
Experimental group
Description:
Intervention 'Osteosynthesis' Percutaneous autologous bone-marrow grafting - surgical technique (ref: Hernigou Ph et al J Bone Joint Surg Am ,2006; 88 (sup 1 part 2): 322-327
Treatment:
Procedure: Osteosynthesis

Trial contacts and locations

11

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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