This study looks at children with forearm fractures that need surgery. The standard treatment uses titanium nails, which usually need to be removed in a second operation later. This study compares titanium nails with bioabsorbable nails, which gradually dissolve in the body and may help some children avoid another operation. The study will compare how quickly the fractures heal on X-ray, and also look at complications, recovery, function, and the family's experience. Children who need surgery will be randomly assigned to one of the two treatments so the comparison is fair. Hypothesis: The researchers expect that fractures treated with bioabsorbable nails will heal almost as quickly as fractures treated with titanium nails, while reducing the need for later implant removal surgery.
This clinical study will examine the treatment of displaced forearm fractures in children. Forearm fractures are very common in childhood. Most can be treated with a cast alone, but some fractures are too unstable or too badly displaced and need an operation to hold the bones in the correct position while they heal. In this study, we compare two types of intramedullary nails, which are thin rods placed inside the bone during surgery to stabilize the fracture. One type is made of titanium, which is the current standard treatment. The other type is bioabsorbable, which means it gradually dissolves in the body over time. The main reason for studying the bioabsorbable nail is that it may allow children to avoid a second planned operation. In Denmark, titanium nails are usually removed in a later procedure, often 6 to 12 months after the first surgery. Even though that removal operation is generally safe, it still means another hospital visit, another anesthetic, another recovery period, and additional stress for the child and family. A dissolving nail could reduce this burden. However, because bioabsorbable nails are more flexible than titanium nails, there is a concern that the bone may heal a little more slowly. The study will include children aged 3 to 13 years who have a displaced fracture in the shaft of one or both forearm bones and who need surgical treatment. Children who take part will be randomly assigned to one of two treatment groups. One group will receive a bioabsorbable nail and a cast for 4 weeks. The other group will receive a titanium nail and a cast for 2 weeks. The allocation is random so the two groups can be compared fairly. Families, the clinicians doing follow-up assessments, and the people evaluating the X-rays will, as far as possible, not know which type of nail the child received. The main outcome in the study is how long it takes for the fracture to heal on X-ray. The study will also compare the two groups with respect to complications, pain, arm function, return to normal activities, and the child's and family's experience during recovery. The children will attend planned follow-up visits with clinical examinations and X-rays over time so the researchers can assess healing and safety in a standardized way. Hypothesis: The study hypothesis is that children treated with bioabsorbable intramedullary nails will have a healing time on X-ray that is not unacceptably longer than children treated with titanium nails. In other words, the researchers expect the bioabsorbable nail to provide nearly the same healing result as the titanium nail, while offering the important advantage that many children may avoid a second operation to remove the implant.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
60
Bioabsorbable intramedullary: Surgical fixation of the forearm fracture with a bioabsorbable intramedullary nail made of PLGA (poly\[lactic-co-glycolic acid\]), performed under general anesthesia, followed by above-elbow cast immobilization for 4 weeks. The implant is designed to retain strength during early healing and gradually absorb over time, so routine implant removal is not planned.
Titanium elastic intramedullary nail arm: surgical fixation of the forearm fracture with a titanium elastic intramedullary nail, performed under general anesthesia, followed by above-elbow cast immobilization for 2 weeks. In Denmark, later elective implant removal is standard practice.
Copenhagen University Hospital - Herlev
København NV, Denmark
Time to fracture healing (weeks)
Time in weeks from surgery/randomization (Day 0) to the first postoperative radiographic assessment meeting the predefined healing threshold, assessed using the modified Radiographic Union Score (mRUS). Healing is defined as mRUS ≥11, with bridging callus present in at least 3 of 4 cortices and no cortex scored 1; for both-bone fractures, both bones must meet this threshold at the same assessment.
Time frame: Postoperative radiographic assessments at 2, 4, and 6 weeks; if healing has not yet been established, additional radiographic assessments at 8 and 10 weeks, until the healing threshold is reached.
Range of motion
Active motion of the elbow, forearm, and wrist measured in degrees with a goniometer.
Time frame: From surgery/randomization (Day 0) to scheduled follow-up assessments at 2, 4, 6, and 12 weeks, and at 6 months, 1 year, and 2 years; if healing is delayed, also at 8 and 10 weeks.
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