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Plaster cast versus functional brace for non-surgical treatment of Achilles tendon rupture (UKSTAR): a multicentre randomised controlled trial and economic evaluation

Authors :
Nasser Kurdy
Avijeet Ghosh
Sarah E Lamb
Sameh El-Kawy
Jason Eyre
Rupe Deol
Nicholas Hancock
Rebecca S. Kearney
Nikos Reissis
Justin Forder
Atif Malik
Harish Kurup
Sridhar Sampalli
R. Nanda
Susan J Dutton
Sanjeev Madan
Mark Westwood
Richard Walter
Sandeep Kapoor
Moez Ballal
Andrew Kelly
Juul Achten
Peter Hull
Fraser Harrold
Amr Abdallah
M. Deakin
Matthew L. Costa
Mandy Maredza
Jordi Ballester
Anhijit Guha
Andrea Scott
Alan J. Johnstone
Ansar Mahmood
Nitin Modi
Ioana R Marian
Simon Burrt
James Beastall
Rajarshi Bhattacharya
Stavros Petrou
Viren Mishra
Asterios Dramis
Paul Harwood
Babis Karagkevrekis
Benjamin J Ollivere
Victoria Lyle
Andrew McAndrew
Ines Reichert
Jane Madeley
Source :
Lancet (London, England)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2020.

Abstract

Summary Background Patients with Achilles tendon rupture who have non-operative treatment have traditionally been treated with immobilisation of the tendon in plaster casts for several weeks. Functional bracing is an alternative non-operative treatment that allows earlier mobilisation, but evidence on its effectiveness and safety is scarce. The aim of the UKSTAR trial was to compare functional and quality-of-life outcomes and resource use in patients treated non-operatively with plaster cast versus functional brace. Methods UKSTAR was a pragmatic, superiority, multicentre, randomised controlled trial done at 39 hospitals in the UK. Patients (aged ≥16 years) who were being treated non-operatively for a primary Achilles tendon rupture at the participating centres were potentially eligible. The exclusion criteria were presenting more than 14 days after injury, previous rupture of the same Achilles tendon, or being unable to complete the questionnaires. Eligible participants were randomly assigned (1:1) to receive a plaster cast or functional brace using a centralised web-based system. Because the interventions were clearly visible, neither patients nor clinicians could be masked. Participants wore the intervention for 8 weeks. The primary outcome was patient-reported Achilles tendon rupture score (ATRS) at 9 months, analysed in the modified intention-to-treat population (all patients in the groups to which they were allocated, excluding participants who withdrew or died before providing any outcome data). The main safety outcome was the incidence of tendon re-rupture. Resource use was recorded from a health and personal social care perspective. The trial is registered with ISRCTN, ISRCTN62639639. Findings Between Aug 15, 2016, and May 31, 2018, 1451 patients were screened, of whom 540 participants (mean age 48·7 years, 79% male) were randomly allocated to receive plaster cast (n=266) or functional brace (n=274). 527 (98%) of 540 were included in the modified intention-to-treat population, and 13 (2%) were excluded because they withdrew or died before providing any outcome data. There was no difference in ATRS at 9 months post injury (cast group n=244, mean ATRS 74∙4 [SD 19∙8]; functional brace group n=259, ATRS 72∙8 [20∙4]; adjusted mean difference –1∙38 [95% CI –4∙9 to 2∙1], p=0·44). There was no difference in the rate of re-rupture of the tendon (17 [6%] of 266 in the plaster cast group vs 13 [5%] of 274 in the functional brace group, p=0·40). The mean total health and personal social care cost was £1181 for the plaster cast group and £1078 for the functional bract group (mean between-group difference –£103 [95% CI –289 to 84]). Interpretation Traditional plaster casting was not found to be superior to early weight-bearing in a functional brace, as measured by ATRS, in the management of patients treated non-surgically for Achilles tendon rupture. Clinicians may consider the use of early weight-bearing in a functional brace as a safe and cost-effective alternative to plaster casting. Funding UK National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment Programme.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01406736
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Lancet (London, England)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4a6a429ba3d618eb60a27ab262af8004
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(19)32942-3