LIVing Donor Allograft for Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction Study
NCT ID: NCT05395767
Last Updated: 2025-05-23
Study Results
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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RECRUITING
NA
40 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2021-09-15
2028-09-30
Brief Summary
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This study will use a technique involves the use of hamstring tendons from a living donor, where the adult (usually a parent) agrees to donate their hamstring tendons, which are dissected out of them and implanted into the child
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Detailed Description
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The choice of an ideal graft in children is difficult. Patients who have not fully grown have smaller tendons than adults, making them less suitable for use in reconstructive surgery. Another option for children's reconstructions is allograft - tendons taken from another human being. This has most commonly been from organ donation (taking tendons from a recently deceased individual) however the rerupture rate of allograft has been shown to be higher than in autograft (tendons taken from the patient themselves). The higher rate of rerupture may be related to the sterilising and storage processes of the harvested tendons.
This study will use a technique used by a leading hospital in Sydney, Australia, that sees and treats a large volume of these patients and has published good outcomes. The technique involves the use of hamstring tendons from a living donor, where the adult (usually a parent) agrees to donate their hamstring tendons, which are dissected out of them and implanted into the child. The technique has the advantage of leaving the child's own tendons intact, and having a larger sized tendon from a parent.
Patients \& parents will be approached in clinic after MRI confirmation of an ACL rupture. If all inclusion and exclusion criteria have been passed and they consent to participate, screening documents \& tests will be completed. The parent will undergo a hamstring tenotomy whilst the child is prepped for ACL reconstruction, then the hamstring donor graft will be inserted in the child patient, using the surgeon's routine fixation devices. All patients will be assessed for skeletal maturity prior to surgery and will be followed up for two years or until skeletal maturity, whichever happens latest. They will follow standard rehabilitation guidelines for paediatric patients at Maidstone \& Tunbridge Wells National Health Service Trust (MTW NHS Trust) and be seen at set study intervals for clinical review, subjective and objective assessment. Any adverse events will be reported to the health regulation authority and Human Tissue Licence Authority.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NA
SINGLE_GROUP
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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endoscopic ACL reconstruction with parent allograft tendon
Endoscopic Anterior Cruciate Ligament reconstruction using living donor hamstring allograft from a parent donor
The Parent donor will undergo hamstring tendon graft harvest under general anaesthesia in a routine fashion in one theatre. The Graft material will be transported thorough to the adjacent theatre, where the child will be anaesthetised and undergoing arthroscopy of their injured knee in preparation for receiving the graft. ACL reconstruction Surgery will be undertaken in the child recipient as per the Surgeons usual technique, +/- meniscus repair +/- lateral tenodesis as required.
Interventions
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Endoscopic Anterior Cruciate Ligament reconstruction using living donor hamstring allograft from a parent donor
The Parent donor will undergo hamstring tendon graft harvest under general anaesthesia in a routine fashion in one theatre. The Graft material will be transported thorough to the adjacent theatre, where the child will be anaesthetised and undergoing arthroscopy of their injured knee in preparation for receiving the graft. ACL reconstruction Surgery will be undertaken in the child recipient as per the Surgeons usual technique, +/- meniscus repair +/- lateral tenodesis as required.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Patients who have had previous surgery for meniscal pathology .
* Patients with current meniscal pathology
* The child and their responsible adult are in agreement with the choice to undergo anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction using living donor allograft.
* Donors has not previously undergone tendon harvest on the chosen donor limb
* Patients are willing to attend follow up appointments and agree to fill in knee questionnaires and allow instrumented knee ligament testing.
Exclusion Criteria
* Patients who are immunosuppressed, or receiving immunosuppressive therapy
* Patients who are unable to attend follow-up appointments for continued research purposes.
* Donors who have previously undergone hamstring tendon surgery on the donor limb
* Patients and donors who have a positive screening blood test for any of the transmissible infections tested
* Donors whose answers to the 'Donor Documentation Questionnaire' indicate that there could be a risk of transmissible infection, may not included
* Donors who are not considered healthy enough to undergo a tenotomy under General anaesthetic
8 Years
17 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Maidstone & Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Nicholas Bowman
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Maidstone & Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust
Locations
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Trauma & Orthopaedic Dept, Tunbridge Wells Hospital
Pembury, Kent, United Kingdom
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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MaidstoneNHS
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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