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The goal of this clinical trial is to find out which type of steroid medicine, when added to a standard pain-control injection during total knee replacement surgery, works best at reducing pain, limiting opioid use, and improving recovery in adults undergoing surgery for severe knee arthritis or injury.
The main questions it aims to answer are:
Does adding a steroid to the injection improve pain control and reduce opioid use after surgery? Is the newer extended-release steroid (Zilretta) more effective and safer-especially for patients with diabetes-than the traditional steroid (methylprednisolone)?
Researchers will compare:
Standard pain-control injection alone Standard injection plus methylprednisolone Standard injection plus Zilretta to see which option provides better pain relief, less opioid use, and improved knee function.
(Patients with diabetes or prediabetes will only be in the standard injection or Zilretta groups so researchers can study whether Zilretta is safer for blood sugar control.)
Participants will:
Be randomly assigned to one of the study groups during their total knee replacement surgery Receive the assigned pain-control injection around the knee joint
Be followed after surgery to measure:
Pain levels Opioid pain medication use Knee movement (range of motion) Whether another procedure (such as manipulation under anesthesia) is needed if the knee becomes too stiff Patient-reported outcome surveys about pain and function
Full description
Total knee replacement surgery (also called total knee arthroplasty, or TKA) is a common procedure for people with severe knee arthritis or injury. While the surgery often leads to significant pain relief and improved mobility, the days and weeks afterward can be uncomfortable. Managing pain during recovery is important-not just to make patients feel better, but also to help them move their knee sooner, avoid excessive use of opioid medications, and get back to normal activities faster.
One common pain management tool is called a pericapsular injection (PAI). This is a mixture of medications injected around the knee joint during surgery to help control pain after the operation. PAIs usually include a long-lasting numbing medicine, an anti-inflammatory drug, and sometimes other medications that improve pain relief. Corticosteroids-powerful anti-inflammatory drugs-are sometimes added, but the best type of steroid and the ideal way to give it is still debated among doctors.
Why This Study Is Being Done This study will compare two types of corticosteroids, methylprednisolone (a traditional steroid) and Zilretta (a newer, extended-release form of the steroid triamcinolone), to see which works better when added to the standard PAI. Zilretta releases medication slowly over time, which may lead to longer-lasting pain control and fewer side effects such as temporary increases in blood sugar-something especially important for people with diabetes.
How the Study Works
Patients having total knee replacement will be randomly placed into one of three groups:
People with diabetes or prediabetes will only be placed in groups 1 or 3 so researchers can compare how Zilretta affects them compared to no steroid at all.
What Will Be Measured
The researchers will check patients' progress at several points after surgery to investigate:
The team believes that adding a corticosteroid to the PAI will:
Why This Matters Past research shows that PAIs can help reduce pain and the need for opioids after knee replacement surgery, without raising the risk of infection or other serious complications. But doctors still don't know which steroid is best to use. If Zilretta works better and causes fewer side effects, it could become the preferred option for many patients-particularly those with other health issues like diabetes.
The results of this study could help guide surgeons toward the safest and most effective pain control strategies for people recovering from knee replacement surgery, ultimately leading to better recoveries, fewer complications, and improved quality of life.
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240 participants in 3 patient groups
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Central trial contact
John P Cody, MD; Ian P Marshall, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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