Trial Comparing Botulin Toxin Versus Hyaluronic Acid by Intra-articular Injection for the Treatment of Painful Knee Osteoarthritis

NCT ID: NCT02832713

Last Updated: 2021-09-14

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

UNKNOWN

Clinical Phase

PHASE2

Total Enrollment

50 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2017-06-09

Study Completion Date

2021-12-31

Brief Summary

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In France, osteoarthritis affects about 10 million people and knee osteoarthritis represents 35% of cases. It is thought that more than 2.5 million people older than 65 years have knee osteoarthritis.

Currently, osteoarthritis management is based on three major axes:

1. Non-pharmacological means, such as patient education, loss of weight and physical activity
2. General pharmacological treatments: mainly paracetamol and then schedule II and III painkillers as well as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agent.
3. Intra-articular pharmacological treatments:

1. Intra-articular injections of corticosteroids: they are recommended during hydarthrotic flare-ups
2. Intra-articular injections of hyaluronic acid (HA) (viscosupplementation) in the absence of intra-articular effusion. However, their efficacy is questioned by most experts in the case of symptomatic knee osteoarthrosis.
4. Sometimes, surgery is the only therapeutic option. However, besides the fact of exposing patients, who are sometimes frail, to several peri- and post-operative complications, the recovery rate (variable according to the prosthesis type and ranging from 5% to 25% at 9 years) in an ageing population justifies waiting as much as possible before surgery. Therefore, it is important to test new therapeutic options for symptomatic osteoarthrosis that will allow postponing the surgical treatment.
5. The use of botulinum toxin (BoNT-A) could thus represents an interesting alternative. BoNT-A is habitually used by intra-muscular injection for its myorelaxant effect in the management of painful reactive periarticular muscle contractures. However, BoNT-A has also antalgic activity independently of the myorelaxant effect. This allows explaining in part the antalgic effect of intra-articular BoNT-A injection. In the literature, six randomized controlled studies (RCS) have compared BoNT-A and intra-articular injections of corticosteroids, hyaluronic acid, or placebo. Only two RCS concerned knee osteoarthritis and compared BoNT-A to corticosteroids and a placebo, respectively, with a significant antalgic effect only in the groups treated with BoNT-A. No study has compared yet the intra-articular injection of BoNT-A to the viscosupplementation by HA in knee osteoarthritis and this is the aim of this trial.

Detailed Description

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Conditions

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Painful Unilateral Femorotibial Knee Osteoarthritis of Any Etiology

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

SINGLE

Outcome Assessors

Study Groups

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Intra-articular injection of botulinum toxin A

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Botulinum toxin A ( BoNT-A)

Intervention Type DRUG

Intra-articular injection of BoNT-A

Intra-articular injection of hyaluronic acid

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Hyaluronic acid (HA)

Intervention Type DEVICE

Intra-articular injection of Hyaluronic acid

Interventions

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Botulinum toxin A ( BoNT-A)

Intra-articular injection of BoNT-A

Intervention Type DRUG

Hyaluronic acid (HA)

Intra-articular injection of Hyaluronic acid

Intervention Type DEVICE

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Painful, or predominantly unilateral painful, knee osteoarthritis of any etiology
* Knee without clinical signs of intra-articular effusion
* Kellgren score ≥ II on X-ray
* WOMAC pain sub-score ≥ 5 in the month preceding the inclusion visit

Exclusion Criteria

Clinical:

* Inflammatory arthropathy,infectious, neoplastic within the past year
* Neuromuscular pathology
* Cardiorespiratory pathology or any other severe disease that interferes with the functional capacities
* Any decompensated or unstable chronic pathology
* Glomerular filtration rate (GFR)\<15 mL/min/1.73m²) within the past 6 months
* HBA1c in diabetic people \> 12% within the past 6 months
* BMI ≥ 35kg/m2
* Infection: joint, general, distant, cutaneous
* Foreign material in the knee to be treated: prosthesis, osteosynthesis material
* Severe coagulation problem: platelets \<100000/mm3 within the past 6 months
* Allergy to BoNT-A
* Allergy to HA
* Pregnant or breast-feeding women
* Treatment with aminoglycosides or direct oral anticoagulants
* Treatment with VKA (antihemorrhagic vitamin) if INR (International Normalized Ratio) higher than 3 within the past month
* Change of anti-pain treatment less than 2 weeks before enrolment
* Treatment with III pain killers or corticosteroids because of intense pain that does not respond to schedule I and II pain-killers
* Intra-articular injection of corticosteroids in the previous two months
* Viscosupplementation and/or injection of BoNT-A in the knee to be treated within the past 6 months
* Injection of BoNT-A (except the knee to be treated) within the past 3 months
* Swallowing troubles
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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University Hospital, Strasbourg, France

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Locations

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Hôpitaux Universitaires de Strasbourg

Strasbourg, , France

Site Status

Countries

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France

Other Identifiers

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6122

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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