This study evaluates the effect of platelet-rich plasma (PRP) use during needling of the extensor carpalis radialis brevis tendon, after failure of proper reeducation including focal extra-corporal shockwave therapy (ESWT). Half of the patients with receive PRP and needling, and half of the patients will receive needling alone. During the reeducation, the clinical evaluation will be monitored and reported as in a case series.
The conservative management of lateral epicondylitis is known to be a difficult-to-treat annoying condition. The first-line conservative management includes physical therapies with adjuvant painkillers and orthotics, and usually extracorporal shockwave therapy (ESWT). In clinical practice, infiltrative therapies a performed either before or after shockwave therapies. In the author's point of view, they represent a second-line conservative treatment. The success rate of ESWT for lateral epicondylitis depends mainly of the protocol used. Especially, poor results were observed with too low energy. Both radial and focal ESWT are effective, and focal ESWT has been showed as being as effective as surgical tenotomy. Concerning infiltrative therapies, it has been well established that corticosteroids are efficient in short-term but deleterious in long-term, likely for degenerative purposes. Prolotherapy, autologous blood, and botulinic toxin injections and others infiltrative therapies are less studied and therefore nowadays not clearly supported by the literature. Stem cells might be an alternative in the future. Platelet-rich-plasma (PRP) is nowadays widely used, but the results of clinical trials are discordant. Even if the superiority of PRP over corticosteroids is well established, the superiority of PRP on tendon needling or peppering is still controversial. Martin et al. 2019 found in a partially blinded randomized controlled trial (RCT) involving 71 patients no clinical differences at 6 months of follow-up between 2 sessions of peppering with saline + local anesthetic and PRP + local anesthetic. In a similar unblended RCT involving 50 patients, Schöffl et al. 2017 found no clinical differences at 6 months of follow-up. Montalvan et al. 2016 found in a RCT involving 50 patients between 2 infiltrations of PRP and saline no clinical differences at 6 months of follow-up. Rehabilitation was not allowed during the trial and the tendon was not peppered. Mishra et al. found in a blinded RCT involving 119 patients a positive clinical effect of PRP on saline solution, using a single injection with peppering. Behera et al. found similar results in a small RCT on 25 patients. Some factors has been advocated to influence the outcomes. The most relevant are: direct mechanic action of the needle and fenestration (peppering) technique, number of PRP injections, cells count (platelets, white blood- and red blood cells), activation of the platelets, concomitant local anesthetic use, peri-interventional use of NSAIDs and corticosteroids, concomitant rehabilitation or a contraria immobilization. Whether the positive results observed into the previous selected studies are due to either PRP, peppering, or any of the confounding factors described above remains to debate. The first aim of this study is to determine the proportion of patients, which would need an infiltrative technique after a proper rehabilitation protocol involving physical therapies, orthotics and ESWT. Our second aim is to establish whether PRP as adjuvant therapy to peppering would increase clinical outcomes. Details of sample size calculation (58 overall, 29 per group): 58 patients are required to have a 95% chance of detecting, as significant at the 5% level, an increase in the primary outcome measure from 50 in the control group to 60 in the experimental group, considering a standard deviation of 10% and a dropout rate of 10%. After the inclusion of 40 patients, the standard deviation will be re-evaluated and the sample size corrected accordingly if necessary.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
58
During 12 weeks, under kinesitherapist guidance, patients will perform daily eccentric stretching and strengthening of the ECRB and periscapular musculature, manual therapies, and kinesiotaping. They will also use orthotics after 6 weeks if kinesiotaping is not effective. At weeks 1-5, patients will undergo weekly ultrasound-guided focused shockwave therapy under the following protocol: 0,15- 0,30mJ/mm2 (the highest energy flux the patient can well tolerate), 1500 shocks at 5Hz at the origin of common extensor or flexor tendon.
In case of failure of proper rehabilitation and shockwave therapy, patients will have a block of the radialis nerve just above the arcade of Frohse with 1 ml of procaine 2%. Then, a single needling of the ECRB enthesis (peppering technique) will be performed as follow: , ultrasound-guided, 25 repetitions with a 20 gauge needle. At the end of the procedure, the lesion will be fulfilled with PRP. Details of PRP preparation (ACP Arthrex): 15 ml of blood, no activators or anticoagulants, poor in white blood cells (the last mm of buffy coat above the red blood cells pellet is not collected). Excentric stretching and strengthening, as well as orthotics or kinesiotaping will be continued as long as symptoms persists during the 6 first months after the needling procedure.
In case of failure of proper rehabilitation and shockwave therapy, patients will have a block of the radialis nerve just above the arcade of Frohse with 1 ml of procaine 2%. Then, a single needling of the ECRB enthesis (peppering technique) will be performed as follow: , ultrasound-guided, 25 repetitions with a 20 gauge needle. At the end of the procedure, the lesion will be fulfilled with saline solution. Excentric stretching and strengthening, as well as orthotics or kinesiotaping will be continued as long as symptoms persists during the 6 first months after the needling procedure.
Hôpital La Providence, Sports Medicine
Neuchâtel, Switzerland
RECRUITINGPain during isometric contraction of the ECRB
Pain is evaluated on a 0-10 scale (0 = no pain) during isometric contraction maneuver of the ECRB
Time frame: 3 months
Pain during isometric contraction of the ECRB
Pain is evaluated on a 0-10 scale (0 = no pain) during isometric contraction maneuver of the ECRB
Time frame: -3, 0, 6, & 12 months
Overall pain evaluation (mean of the 3 last days)
Pain is evaluated on a 0-10 scale (0 = no pain)
Time frame: -3, 0, 3, 6, & 12 months
SANE score (Single Assessment Numeric Evaluation)
Function is evaluated on a 0-100% scale (100 = good function)
Time frame: -3, 0, 3, 6, & 12 months
PRTEE score (Patient-Rated Tennis Elbow Evaluation)
Score going from 0 to 100 (0 = good outcome)
Time frame: -3, 0, 3, 6, & 12 months
Strength on Jamar test (hand grip strength)
Grip strength measured in Kg (Higher strength = better outcome)
Time frame: -3, 0, 3, 6, & 12 months
Proportion of patient cured with reeducation protocol
Descriptive statistics: Evaluation of the proportion of patients for which the tendon needling is not necessary
Time frame: 0 months
Volume of PRP prepared
Descriptive statistics: Quantity of PRP prepared (in ml)
Time frame: 0 months
Volume of PRP (or saline solution) injected
Descriptive statistics: Quantity of PRP (or saline solution) injected (in ml)
Time frame: 0 months
Ultrasonographic aspect of the epicondylar tendon: Hypoechogenic lesion
The tridimensional volume of the lesion is measured in mm\^3
Time frame: -3, 0, 3, & 6 months
Ultrasonographic aspect of the epicondylar tendon: Doppler
The Doppler reaction will be evaluated on a subjective scale (none, mild, average, high, huge)
Time frame: -3, 0, 3, & 6 months
Ultrasonographic aspect of the epicondylar tendon: Solution of continuity
During active contraction of the ECRB, an eventual solution of continuity will be measured in mm
Time frame: -3, 0, 3, & 6 months
Ultrasonographic aspect of the epicondylar tendon: Thickness
The thickness of the common epitrochlear will be measured in mm
Time frame: -3, 0, 3, & 6 months
Ultrasonographic aspect of the epicondylar tendon: Compressibility
The presence or absence of compressibility of the common epitrochlear tendon (binary outcome)
Time frame: -3, 0, 3, & 6 months
Ultrasonography of the epicondylar tendon: Sonopalpation
The patient pain on sonopalpation will be evaluated on a 0-10 scale (0= no pain)
Time frame: -3, 0, 3, & 6 months
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