Comparison of Balloon Kyphoplasty and Vertebroplasty in Subacute Osteoporotic Vertebral Fractures
NCT ID: NCT00749086
Last Updated: 2014-12-16
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE4
97 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2007-12-31
2012-06-30
Brief Summary
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1. Vertebroplasty consisting in the percutaneous injection into the fractured vertebra of polymethylmetacrylate cement (the cement used to fix prosthesis in joint replacement) through a posterior route through the vertebral pedicles under radiological guidance.
2. Balloon Kyphoplasty which consists of placing through a percutaneous posterior approach under radiological guidance, into the fractured vertebra a balloon which is inflated with fluid and creates a cavity. This may restore part of the vertebral height loss due to the fracture. In addition, after balloon deflation, polymethylmetacrylate cement is injected with low pressure into the created cavity to fix fracture reduction. The study will indicate if balloon kyphoplasty is able to restore vertebral height of the fractured vertebra better than vertebroplasty.
Detailed Description
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1. Percutaneous Vertebroplasty is a percutaneous treatment of vertebral fractures which is used now for more than 25 years. It was first reported in aggressive vertebral hemangiomas and vertebral malignancies and than in osteoporotic vertebral fractures. More recently, vertebroplasty was used in traumatic vertebral fracture.Vertebroplasty is performed under fluoroscopic guidance with the patient in prone position under general or local anesthesia and conscious sedation. A trocar needle is inserted through a posterior approach into the vertebral neural arch and pedicle, up to the fractured vertebral body. Depending on cases a unilateral or bilateral approach is used. A bilateral approach is used in the cases of traumatic fractures. Once the needle is well positioned into the vertebral body as checked on apical and Lateral views, a radio-opaque cement, in a viscous phase, is slowly injected into the vertebral body under continuous fluoroscopic control. The injection is stopped in case of cement leakage outside from the vertebral body. Polymethylmetacrylate is the most commonly used cement. Its biologic compatibility is well established since used in orthopedic surgery for many decades. Some operators are reluctant to use a non-resorbable cement in young patients. However, to date, the ideal resorbable injectable cement to be discovered. Vertebroplasty allows rapid fracture fixation and decrease in pain, thus allowing the patient to resume walking and daily activities in the days following the procedure. Vertebroplasty does not reduce significantly the kyphosis angle due to the fracture unless nonunion is present in the fracture line.
2. Percutaneous Balloon Kyphoplasty is a variant of vertebroplasty which is performed under general anaesthesia using the KyphX® System (Medtronic, Sunnyvale, California). Balloon kyphoplasty aims at restore vertebral height of the fractured vertebra using an inflatable balloon prior to inject surgical cement (PMMA) into the vertebral body and fix the fracture. It is an expensive technique costing around 4,000 euros for up to 2 vertebrae in the same patient. The surgical technique for the procedure has been described by Lieberman et al. A bilateral approach is chosen to insert working cannulas into the posterior part of the vertebral body. Fluoroscopy is used to insert the tools and control the procedure. With reaming tools, two working channels are created and the balloons are inserted. The balloons are available in lengths of 10, 15 and 20 mm.The two balloons(one on each side) should ideally be centered at middle height between the superior and inferior endplates and in the anterior two-thirds of the vertebral body. Balloon placement into the vertebral body is checked using radiopaque markers at the two extremities of the balloon. Once inserted, the balloons are inflated using visual, volume and pressure control to create a cavity. Inflation is stopped when one of the following inflation endpoints is reached: pressure raised over 400 psi, balloon contacts one of the cortical bone of the vertebra or reaching maximal balloon inflation volume. The balloons are then deflated and removed. The mean balloon inflation volume is 2 to 3ml. The Bone Filler Device, filled before with 1.5 ml of polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA), is then advanced through the working cannula towards the anterior part of the cavity and cement is slowly extruded by a stainless steel stylet, acting as a plunger. When the amount of cement from the first Bone Filler Device is delivered in the cavity, it is removed and another Bone Filler Device is advanced through the working cannula. This step is repeated till a complete fill of the cavity is obtained. The same procedure is repeated through the other working cannula at the contra-lateral pedicle. Filling of the cavity with highly viscous PMMA is performed under continuous fluoroscopic control.
Conditions
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Keywords
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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2
balloon kyphoplasty
balloon kyphoplasty
Balloon Kyphoplasty, a variant of Vertebroplasty, in which a balloon is first placed into the fractured vertebra and inflated with fluid in order to create a cavity. Then, the balloon are deflated and removed. This may restore part of the vertebral height loss due to the fracture and facilitate the injection of the cement with low pressure.
1
vertebroplasty
vertebroplasty
Vertebroplasty consisting in the percutaneous injection into the fractured vertebra of polymethylmetacrylate cement (the cement used to fix prosthesis in joint replacement) through a posterior route through the vertebral pedicles under radiological guidance
Interventions
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balloon kyphoplasty
Balloon Kyphoplasty, a variant of Vertebroplasty, in which a balloon is first placed into the fractured vertebra and inflated with fluid in order to create a cavity. Then, the balloon are deflated and removed. This may restore part of the vertebral height loss due to the fracture and facilitate the injection of the cement with low pressure.
vertebroplasty
Vertebroplasty consisting in the percutaneous injection into the fractured vertebra of polymethylmetacrylate cement (the cement used to fix prosthesis in joint replacement) through a posterior route through the vertebral pedicles under radiological guidance
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Patient has read and sign the informed consent
* Male or female, 50 years or older
* One or two non-traumatic vertebral fracture(s):
* Of osteoporotic origin (low speed trauma such as fall from his own height or less than 80 cm)
* Fracture(s) older than 6 weeks duration after the onset of pain related to the fracture· The fracture(s) exhibit(s) high signal intensity on T2-weighted images and a benign appearance at MRI
* Persistent pain despite medical treatment according to VAS ≥ 5 or a last resort to morphine treatment
* The patient will be able to receive the selected protocol treatment within 15 days after treatment randomization.
* The benign nature of the vertebral fracture has to be confirmed by the results of the biopsy performed during vertebroplasty or balloon kyphoplasty.
* Known allergy to a contrast media or to one of the cement components used for kyphoplasty.
* More than two recent vertebral fractures
* Current infection
* Impossibility to perform the percutaneous approach of the vertebra to treat.
* Known allergy to a contrast media or to one of the cement components used for kyphoplasty.
* Reduction by more than 50% of the anteroposterior width of the bony spinal canal due to the vertebral fracture to treat.
* Vertebral fracture with loss of 90%or more of the vertebral body height
* Malignant and traumatic vertebral fractures
* Contraindication to MRI :
* Metallic implant : pace-maker, no auditive implant , metallic vascular or movable cardiac device
* Metallic surgical clips Claustrophobia
* Evolutive cardiac disease nonreactive to medical treatment
* Patient presenting a non correctable spontaneous or therapeutic coagulation disorder.
* Presence of an unexplained biological inflammatory syndrome with VS≥20
* Non compliant patient: Impossibility to participate to the study and to be followed up for 1 year.
* Pregnant or breast feeding women
* Patient not affiliated to social security
Exclusion Criteria
* Neurological signs related to the vertebral fracture to treat
* History of surgical or percutaneous spine treatment except simple discectomy at a single or multiple vertebral levels with no residual pain.
50 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Ministry of Health, France
OTHER_GOV
Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Jean-Denis LAREDO, M.D.,PR.
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
AP-HP Assistance Publique- Hôpitaux de Paris
Locations
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Service de Radiologie, Hôpital Lariboisière
Paris, , France
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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P060108
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id