Doctors are studying an investigational treatment to be used during the vertebroplasty procedure when treating vertebral compression fractures (spine fractures) that may help to reduce pain and restore mobility. If one has experienced back pain for at least 4 weeks but not longer than 1 year, he/she may be eligible to participate. The purpose of this protocol is to describe the methods for the clinical evaluation of Cortoss for vertebroplasty in patients with painful osteoporotic compression fractures. Eligible patients with painful osteoporotic compression fractures of the spine are divided into two groups. Each enrolled patient will have the vertebroplasty procedure; however one group of patients will have the vertebroplasty procedure using polymethylmethacrylate \[PMMA\] (a Food and Drug Administration \[FDA\]-approved bone cement) and the other group of patients will have the vertebroplasty procedure using a relatively new (investigational) biomaterial called Cortoss.
This is a prospective, multi-center randomized, controlled study designed to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of Cortoss® Synthetic Cortical Bone Void Filler in vertebral augmentation using the percutaneous vertebroplasty technique. Study eligible patients with painful osteoporotic compression fractures will be randomized (2:1) to vertebroplasty with Cortoss (treatment group) or PMMA (control group), respectively. Patients will not be told which treatment they will receive (single blind study design). Safety and effectiveness will be determined by comparing the success rate of the treatment group to the success rate of the control group. Secondary endpoints will include Quality of Life, Patient satisfaction, evaluation of the patient's pain and function post-operatively compared to baseline, and maintenance of vertebral body height and alignment. For the purposes of this study, vertebral augmentation, or vertebroplasty, is defined as a minimally invasive procedure utilizing manual instruments and radiological guidance to deliver an in-situ polymerizable material to stabilize a collapsed or fractured vertebral body. The goal is to alleviate pain caused by the fracture and enhance or prevent further deterioration of function. This multi-center study will evaluate Cortoss for the augmentation of one or two vertebra(e), fractured as a result of osteoporosis, located between (and including) the levels of the sixth thoracic and the fifth lumbar vertebrae. A total of 243 patients will be enrolled at up to 19 sites. All subjects must have radiographic evidence of a vertebral body fracture due to osteoporosis. After complying with all eligibility criteria, subjects will sign an informed consent document and will be randomized into vertebroplasty treatment with Cortoss or PMMA (1:1 ratio). Patients will be followed for at least 24 months and recruitment is expected to take between 9 and 12 months. Visits and assessments are planned according to the time and events schedule.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
256
Study eligible patients with painful osteoporotic compression fractures will be randomized to percutaneous vertebroplasty with CORTOSS (treatment group) or PMMA (active control group).
Scottsdale Medical Center
Scottsdale, Arizona, United States
Core Orthopaedic Medical Center, P.C.
Encinitas, California, United States
Eisenhower Medical Center
Rancho Mirage, California, United States
St. John's Spine Institute
Santa Monica, California, United States
Indian River Radiology
Vero Beach, Florida, United States
Emory Orthopaedics and Spine Center
Atlanta, Georgia, United States
Millenium Pain Center
Bloomington, Illinois, United States
Northwestern University
Chicago, Illinois, United States
The Spine Institute of Louisiana
Shreveport, Louisiana, United States
Washington University Medical Center
St Louis, Missouri, United States
...and 8 more locations
Early and sustained decrease in pain (efficacy prong of primary endpoint) at 24 months compared to pre-treatment baseline using the Visual Analog Scale (VAS)
Time frame: 24 Months
Maintenance or improvement in function (efficacy prong of primary endpoint) at 24 months compared to pre-treatment baseline using the Oswestry Disability Index (ODI)
Time frame: 24 Months
Maintenance vertebral height and alignment (efficacy prong of primary endpoint) at 24 Months compared to 1-month post-vertebropalsty baseline radiographs
Time frame: 24 Months
No device-related subsequent surgical intervention at study treated level
Time frame: 24 Months
Maintenance or improvement in quality of life (secondary endpoint) at 24 months compared to baseline using the SF-12
Time frame: 24 Months
Ambulatory status
Time frame: 24 Months
Patient satisfaction
Time frame: 24 Months
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