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Upper limb spasticity is currently mainly managed with local toxin treatments. Recent studies suggested combining botulinum toxin injections with splinting to optimise rehabilitation in spastic patients. However, one study focused exclusively on lower limb spasticity, the second on elbow flexor hypertonia, and the last on wrist and finger spasticity in children.
A study was performed in adult patients with upper limb spasticity treated with botulinum toxin injections used as primary objective the tolerance for dynamic splinting. The authors noted that the need for botulinum toxin was reduced in 2 patients out of 6. No study has been conducted to date on the splinting + toxin combination in adults.
Another study showed that stretching sessions over 2 weeks of a muscle just given botulinum toxin helped improve the toxin's efficacy 2, 6 and 12 weeks after the injection. For this reason, rehabilitation teams routinely prescribe 10 sessions of physiotherapy for 15 days after botulinum treatment.
Based on this principle, we hypothesise that dynamic night splinting applied just after botulinum toxin treatment may also increase the toxin's efficacy. We chose a dynamic splint providing continuous stretching of the wrist and fingers in extension whilst allowing active flexion. Night splinting is thought to promote optimal functional use of the paretic upper limb during the day and thus prevent learned non-use, which could worsen the spasticity.
Each patient will receive treatment cycles, whose results will be compared, so that each patient will act as his/her own control. The evaluation will be based on the Tardieu scale chosen for its greater inter-individual reproducibility and greater reliability to measure spasticity.
The degree of extension of wrist and fingers provided by the splint will be adjusted to the patient's clinical condition with the elastic tensioners. The purpose of the splint is to maintain the stretch beyond the Tardieu spasticity angle at fast speed (V3) without reaching maximum extension, which could be harmful.
This protocol is designed to determine whether dynamic night hand splinting combined with botulinum toxin injections will improve botulinum antispastic efficacy in adults with brain damage.
Full description
This prospective, multicentre, randomised, evaluation-blinded, crossover, pilot study, will include different treatment cycles: a control cycle (toxin alone) and a study cycle (toxin + splinting).
It will be conducted in two sites: CHU de Reims and UGECAM de Charleville Mézières.
The study population will include patients with upper limb spasticity associated with functional impairment and/or pain. To be included, the patients must be non-naïve to botulinum toxin, with a period of at least 4 months since the last toxin injections.
Each patient will be given botulinum toxin injections in the hypertonic muscles of his/her upper limb at the beginning of each cycle, i.e. on D0 Phase 1 (D0P1) and D0 Phase 2 (D0P2). This means each patient will receive two sets of injections at 5-month interval for the whole duration of the study.
As this is the first study of its type, the required number of subjects cannot be calculated and the decision was taken to conduct a pilot study. The required number of patients has been set at 30 for reasons of clinical relevance and study site capacity.
The patients will be randomised centrally into two arms of 15 patients each:
Botulinum toxin will be administered under electrical stimulation guidance to improve the accuracy of the injections in the muscles. Dysport® doses will be adjusted to the muscle group being treated.
The post-injection rehabilitation protocol will be identical for both cycles, and include 10 sessions of physiotherapy to stretch the injected muscles (as per routine practice). The prescription of these sessions will be standardised. These daily sessions will start the day following the botulinum injections, and continue 5 times a week for 2 weeks for both treatment phases.
For the study cycle, the splint will be worn only at night (8.00 pm to 8.00 am) for 4 weeks, starting on the first evening after the toxin injection.
Any previous and on-going drug treatment will also be recorded. Concomitant oral antispastic treatments will be authorised provided they were initiated prior to the patient's inclusion in the study, and that dosage regimens remain unchanged.
The investigator performing the evaluations will be blinded to the treatment cycle, i.e. he/she will not know which treatment cycle the patient is currently in. Therefore, the evaluating, injecting and splint-referring physicians will be three different people. To limit potential biases, these 3 persons will remain the same during all the study for all the patients included.
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1 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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