Sex Hormone Supplementation and Rotator Cuff Repair: A Preliminary Randomized Trial

NCT ID: NCT04944836

Last Updated: 2024-12-06

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

RECRUITING

Clinical Phase

PHASE2

Total Enrollment

58 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2023-03-09

Study Completion Date

2027-04-01

Brief Summary

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Shoulder tendon tears are a common cause of shoulder pain and disability and after surgery the repaired tendon often does not heal. In this pilot study, men with low sex hormone levels will be randomly assigned to receive sex hormone therapy or placebo pills while healing from tendon repair surgery in their shoulder. Sex hormone therapy increases sex hormone levels, and the investigators will test whether these increased sex hormone levels show promise in improving tendon healing and patient shoulder function and pain.

Detailed Description

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The rotator cuff is a system of tendons in the shoulder that stabilize the ball within the socket. These tendons frequently tear with age, which causes pain, weakness, and dysfunction in the shoulder. While these tears can be surgically repaired, they do not always heal. Our data suggest that deficiency of testosterone and estrogen can contribute to both tearing of the rotator cuff and failure of healing after rotator cuff repair. Testosterone can be converted into estrogen in the body through the aromatase enzyme, which is in both tendons and bones, as well as other tissues. Both testosterone and estrogen can improve bone quality. While testosterone is frequently prescribed for testosterone deficiency, when it is given your body no longer has the drive to make testosterone. So when the treatment is withdrawn testosterone levels can go very low until feedback mechanisms in the body motivate it to make more. As a result, testosterone is not usually given temporarily. For temporary treatment clomiphene avoids this issue. Clomiphene works at the feedback mechanisms within the body to trick the body into thinking testosterone and estrogen levels are low and thus to motivate it to make more testosterone and estrogen. However, clomiphene can only be given continuously to men, because women's estrogen levels regularly cycle up and down on a monthly basis and clomiphene interferes with this cycle. The purpose of this study is to determine whether clomiphene treatment decreases pain and improves function, increases tendon healing, and improves bone quality with rotator cuff repair in men. We hypothesize that clomiphene treatment will decrease pain and improve function, improve tendon healing, and improve bone quality with rotator cuff repair in men. This is a placebo-controlled study, so a control group of patients will received placebo pills, i.e. "sugar pills", instead of clomiphene. This is a randomized study, so patients enrolled in the study will be randomly assigned to the clomiphene group or the placebo group. This is a blinded study, so both the patients enrolled in the will not know whether they are in the clomiphene or the control group. This is a double-blinded study, so the doctors performing the surgeries and the study will not know whether each specific patient is in the clomiphene or the control group. Study participants will first start the clomiphene treatment one month before surgery and will continue the treatment for six months after surgery. Both before surgery and six months after surgery, study participants will fill out study questionnaires about shoulder pain and function. Both before surgery and six months after surgery, study participants will undergo an magnetic resonance imaging study to examine the rotator cuff tendons as well as the bone quality within the shoulder. The magnetic resonance imaging study after surgery is provided free to study participants. Study participants will be compensated for completing the study. These results are important because may lead to a better understanding of the problem, more effective treatment, and improved clinical outcomes for future patients.

Conditions

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Rotator Cuff Tears

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

QUADRUPLE

Participants Caregivers Investigators Outcome Assessors

Study Groups

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Control

All patients will receive non-labeled pills identical in appearance from our pharmacy, to be taking once every other day. In the control group, these will be placebo. These will be taken every other day for seven months beginning four week prior to surgery and extending for six months after surgery.

Group Type PLACEBO_COMPARATOR

Rotator Cuff Repair

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

The operative protocol will be standardized in all patients. Both the operative protocol and post-operative rehabilitation protocol will be per our standard of care, without alteration. An arthroscopic approach will be used. In all cases a double-row rotator cuff repair using triple-loaded anchor(s) on the medial row will be used. Post-operatively all patients will be placed in a sling for six weeks. Active range of motion exercises will begin at six weeks post-operatively and strengthening will be delayed until 12 weeks post-operatively. In all phases of care our peri-operative and post-operative protocol for study patients will be similar to our current clinical practice to ensure generalizability.

Clomiphene

All patients will receive non-labeled pills identical in appearance from our pharmacy, to be taking once every other day. In the study group, these will contain 50 mg of clomiphene citrate. These will be taken every other day for seven months beginning four week prior to surgery and extending for six months after surgery.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Clomiphene Citrate

Intervention Type DRUG

All patients will receive non-labeled pills identical in appearance from our pharmacy, to be taking once every other day. In the study group, these will contain 50 mg of clomiphene citrate. In the control group, these will be placebo. These will be taken every other day for seven months beginning four weeks prior to surgery and extending for six months after surgery. After enrollment patients will be randomized. Patient will be assigned to the 2 groups using a permuted block randomization scheme with blocks of size 2, 4, and 6. Prior to initiation of the study opaque sealed envelopes will be prepared and thoroughly shuffled and then used sequentially during the study. These randomization assignments will be available to the pharmacy in a web-based format or by cards in sealed envelopes. A nonparticipant in the study (the pharmacy at our institution) will administer this process.

Rotator Cuff Repair

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

The operative protocol will be standardized in all patients. Both the operative protocol and post-operative rehabilitation protocol will be per our standard of care, without alteration. An arthroscopic approach will be used. In all cases a double-row rotator cuff repair using triple-loaded anchor(s) on the medial row will be used. Post-operatively all patients will be placed in a sling for six weeks. Active range of motion exercises will begin at six weeks post-operatively and strengthening will be delayed until 12 weeks post-operatively. In all phases of care our peri-operative and post-operative protocol for study patients will be similar to our current clinical practice to ensure generalizability.

Interventions

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Clomiphene Citrate

All patients will receive non-labeled pills identical in appearance from our pharmacy, to be taking once every other day. In the study group, these will contain 50 mg of clomiphene citrate. In the control group, these will be placebo. These will be taken every other day for seven months beginning four weeks prior to surgery and extending for six months after surgery. After enrollment patients will be randomized. Patient will be assigned to the 2 groups using a permuted block randomization scheme with blocks of size 2, 4, and 6. Prior to initiation of the study opaque sealed envelopes will be prepared and thoroughly shuffled and then used sequentially during the study. These randomization assignments will be available to the pharmacy in a web-based format or by cards in sealed envelopes. A nonparticipant in the study (the pharmacy at our institution) will administer this process.

Intervention Type DRUG

Rotator Cuff Repair

The operative protocol will be standardized in all patients. Both the operative protocol and post-operative rehabilitation protocol will be per our standard of care, without alteration. An arthroscopic approach will be used. In all cases a double-row rotator cuff repair using triple-loaded anchor(s) on the medial row will be used. Post-operatively all patients will be placed in a sling for six weeks. Active range of motion exercises will begin at six weeks post-operatively and strengthening will be delayed until 12 weeks post-operatively. In all phases of care our peri-operative and post-operative protocol for study patients will be similar to our current clinical practice to ensure generalizability.

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

1. A plan for a primary rotator cuff repair
2. Male sex
3. \>1 cm tear width, full thickness supraspinatus/infraspinatus tear

Exclusion Criteria

1. Active infection
2. Pre-operative testosterone supplementation
3. Known diagnosis of secondary testicular failure or testosterone deficiency
4. Medically unfit for operative intervention
5. Revision surgery
6. Unwillingness to participate in the study, including post-operative imaging
7. Inability to read or comprehend written instructions
8. Prisoner
9. Concomitant patch augmentation or tendon-transfer
10. Untreated prostate cancer
11. Liver disease
12. Pituitary or hypothalamic dysfunction
Minimum Eligible Age

40 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

80 Years

Eligible Sex

MALE

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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University of Utah

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Peter Chalmers

Associate Professor, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Locations

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University of Utah

Salt Lake City, Utah, United States

Site Status RECRUITING

Countries

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United States

Central Contacts

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Peter Chalmers

Role: CONTACT

Phone: 8015870063

Email: [email protected]

Facility Contacts

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Peterr Chalmerrs

Role: primary

Other Identifiers

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RCRHRT

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id