FACADE is a prospective, randomized, controlled, parallel group non-inferiority trial comparing the traditional hospital surveillance (inpatient, patients staying in the hospital for 1-3 nights after surgery) to outpatient care (discharge on the day of the surgery, usually within 6-8 hours after procedure) in patients who have undergone anterior cervical decompression and fusion (ACDF) procedure.
To determine whether early discharge (outpatient care) is noninferior to inpatient care, the investigators will randomize 104 patients to these two groups and follow them for 6 months using the Neck Disability Index (NDI) as the primary outcome. The investigators expect that early discharge is not significantly worse (inferior) than the current care in terms of change in NDI. Noninferiority will be declared if the mean improvement for outpatient care is no worse than the mean improvement for inpatient care, within statistical variability, by a margin of 17.3%. The investigators hypothesize that a shorter hospital stay results in more rapid return to normal daily activities, shorter duration of sick leave and decreased secondary costs to health care system. Secondary outcomes in the study are arm pain and neck pain using the Numeric Rating Scale, operative success (Odom's criteria), patient's satisfaction to treatment, general quality of life (EQ-5D-5L), work ability score (WAS), sickness absence days, return to previous leisure activities, and complications. Patients who are eligible for the trial, but are not willing to undergo randomization, will be asked to be included in a simultaneous, pragmatic follow-up cohort.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
104
Patient discharge on the day of the surgery, usually within 6-8 hours after procedure
Helsinki University Hospital
Helsinki, Finland
Change from baseline Neck Disability Index at 6 months after operation
Neck disability Index scale score ranges from 0 to 100%. Score 0 indicates no disability as score 100% indicates worst possible disability.
Time frame: Before and up to 6 months after operation
Change from baseline Numeric rating scale on arm pain at six months after operation
Numeric rating scale ranges from 0 to 10, where 0 indicates no pain and 10 indicates worst possible pain
Time frame: Before and up to 6 months after operation
Change from baseline Numeric rating scale on neck pain at six months after operation
Numeric rating scale ranges from 0 to 10, where 0 indicates no pain and 10 indicates worst possible pain
Time frame: Before and up to 6 months after operation
Rate of returning to previous leisure activities after operation
Before the operation, participants will be asked to name the most important daily leisure activity they are not able to perform because of the disease. At each follow-up time point (Table 2), participants will be asked to respond to the following question: "Have you been able to return to your leisure activity?" ("yes" or "no")
Time frame: Before and up to 6 months after operation
Change from baseline Work Ability Score (WAS) at six months after operation
Numeric rating score ranges from 0 to 10, where 0 indicates that participant is completely incapable to work and 10 indicates participants work ability at its best
Time frame: Before and up to 6 months after operation
The duration of sick leave
the number of sickness absence days from work both before and after the operation. The number of sickness absence days will be treated as a continuous variable
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Time frame: Before and after operation