Please note that the copy function is not enabled for this field.
If you wish to
modify
existing outcomes, please copy and paste the current outcome text into the Update field.
LOGIN
CREATE ACCOUNT
LOGIN
CREATE ACCOUNT
MY TRIALS
REGISTER TRIAL
FAQs
HINTS AND TIPS
DEFINITIONS
Trial Review
The ANZCTR website will be unavailable from 1pm until 3pm (AEDT) on Wednesday the 30th of October for website maintenance. Please be sure to log out of the system in order to avoid any loss of data.
The safety and scientific validity of this study is the responsibility of the study sponsor and investigators. Listing a study does not mean it has been endorsed by the ANZCTR. Before participating in a study, talk to your health care provider and refer to this
information for consumers
Download to PDF
Trial registered on ANZCTR
Registration number
ACTRN12615000043538
Ethics application status
Approved
Date submitted
17/12/2014
Date registered
21/01/2015
Date last updated
19/08/2019
Date data sharing statement initially provided
19/08/2019
Date results provided
19/08/2019
Type of registration
Prospectively registered
Titles & IDs
Public title
Can relative motion extension splinting provide an earlier return to hand function than a controlled active motion protocol after extensor tendon repair in zone V and VI? A prospective randomised clinical trial
Query!
Scientific title
A randomized clinical trial comparing early active motion
programs: Earlier hand function, TAM, and orthotic satisfaction
with a relative motion extension program for zones V and VI
extensor tendon repairs
Query!
Secondary ID [1]
285863
0
Nil
Query!
Universal Trial Number (UTN)
U1111-1162-9133
Query!
Trial acronym
RMES vs Ext CAM
Query!
Linked study record
Query!
Health condition
Health condition(s) or problem(s) studied:
Extensor tendon laceration
293775
0
Query!
Condition category
Condition code
Physical Medicine / Rehabilitation
294080
294080
0
0
Query!
Occupational therapy
Query!
Surgery
294081
294081
0
0
Query!
Other surgery
Query!
Injuries and Accidents
294186
294186
0
0
Query!
Other injuries and accidents
Query!
Intervention/exposure
Study type
Interventional
Query!
Description of intervention(s) / exposure
Patients who have undergone extensor tendon repair in zone V and/or VI will be randomised post-operatively into either a group who receive the usual rehabilitation protocol of controlled active motion, or an experimental group who will be treated using a relative motion extension splinting protocol- this uses an alternative splint and exercise programme.
The splint in the intervention group includes only the MCP joints rather than the MCPs, wrist and forearm, and positions the injured MCP joint (s) in 15-20 degrees relative extension to the other digits.
In the first 4 weeks no specific exercises are provided, the patient is advised to move the hand and use it for light activities in the splint. From 4 weeks the patient will be provided with customised exercises to reduce a lag if one exists, such as active MCP extension and place and hold in extension, and tendon gliding exercises if there is a limitation in flexion. These are usually around 10 repetitions 5 times per day but will be adapted to the patient. From 8 weeks passive flexion stretches 5 times per day may be included if necessary to regain flexion. Patients will also be advised on the use of heat and massage at home
The hand therapist (OT or physio) will teach the exercises and advise the patient on the use of the hand at home; they may use modalities such as heat and massage in therapy sessions.
Consultation will be one-on-one sessions. Usually the first session will be for 1 hour and subsequent sessions 30 minutes each, 1 -2 times per week for the first 4-6 weeks and then once every 1-2 weeks after this until approximately 8 -10 weeks post-operatively. Frequency and duration of sessions will be customised to the individual patients needs and are not dictated by the study protocol.
Adherence to splinting will be assessed by the therapist treating the participant and a splinting questionnaire will be completed at the 4 week mark.
Query!
Intervention code [1]
290842
0
Rehabilitation
Query!
Intervention code [2]
290927
0
Treatment: Devices
Query!
Comparator / control treatment
The comparator is the group who will receive the controlled active motion protocol that is the usual post-operative rehabilitation regime at this unit.
This splint includes the forearm, wrist and all digits and only allows motion at the IP joints
In weeks 1-4 patients are advised on active flexion/ extension of IP joints within the confines of the splint, and place and hold of MCP into extension; in weeks 4-6, tendon gliding exercises and wrist extension/ flexion are commenced. If there is a limitation in flexion then at 8 weeks passive flexion of the digits will be introduced. Usual exercise frequency is 5 times per day, 10 repetitions, but this will be adapted to suit the individual. Patients will also be advised on the use of heat and massage at home
The hand therapist (OT or physio) will teach the exercises and advise the patient on the use of the hand at home; they may use modalities such as heat and massage in therapy sessions.
Consultation will be one-on-one. Usually the first session will be for 1 hour and subsequent sessions 30 minutes each, 1 -2 times per week for the first 4-6 weeks and then once every 1-2 weeks after this until approximately 8 -10 weeks post-operatively. Frequency and duration of sessions will be customised to the individual patients needs and are not dictated by the study protocol.
Adherence to splinting will be assessed by the therapist treating the participant and a splinting questionnaire will be completed at the 4 week mark.
Query!
Control group
Active
Query!
Outcomes
Primary outcome [1]
293868
0
Sollerman hand function assessment score
Query!
Assessment method [1]
293868
0
Query!
Timepoint [1]
293868
0
4 and 8 weeks post-operatively
Query!
Secondary outcome [1]
312035
0
QuickDASH score - participant's subjective assessment of their hand function and ability to perform everyday tasks
Query!
Assessment method [1]
312035
0
Query!
Timepoint [1]
312035
0
4 and 8 weeks post-op
Query!
Secondary outcome [2]
312036
0
Days to return to work after surgery; the treating therapist will record the date that the participant returns to work and inform the investigating team
Query!
Assessment method [2]
312036
0
Query!
Timepoint [2]
312036
0
Throughout the 8 weeks of the study
Query!
Secondary outcome [3]
312037
0
Range of motion using a manual finger goniometer
Query!
Assessment method [3]
312037
0
Query!
Timepoint [3]
312037
0
4 weeks and 8 weeks post-op
Query!
Secondary outcome [4]
312038
0
Grip strength using a handheld manual Jamar dynamometer
Query!
Assessment method [4]
312038
0
Query!
Timepoint [4]
312038
0
8 weeks post-op
Query!
Secondary outcome [5]
312039
0
Splinting adherence questionnaire - this is an adaptation of a questionnaire used in a previous study on patient adherence to splinting after tendon repair
Query!
Assessment method [5]
312039
0
Query!
Timepoint [5]
312039
0
4 weeks post-op
Query!
Secondary outcome [6]
312040
0
Satisfaction questionnaire - this is adapted from the Patient Evauluation Measure (PEM) published by Dias and Braybrooke
Query!
Assessment method [6]
312040
0
Query!
Timepoint [6]
312040
0
8 weeks post-op
Query!
Eligibility
Key inclusion criteria
Patients undergoing extensor tendon repair to at least one digit in zone V and/or VI through CMDHB
Simple tendon lacerations of 50-100% of the tendon substance as assessed intra-operatively by surgeon
Participants must be able to attend follow-up
Participants must be able to understand English or have an interpreter available
Query!
Minimum age
16
Years
Query!
Query!
Maximum age
No limit
Query!
Query!
Sex
Both males and females
Query!
Can healthy volunteers participate?
No
Query!
Key exclusion criteria
Complex injuries involving unstable fractures or concurrent flexor tendon injury
Extensor tendon repairs to three or more digits
‘Fight bites’ or infected injuries which cannot be primarily repaired
Thumb extensor tendon repairs
Any factor which would make the patient unsuitable for inclusion in the view of the treating surgeon or investigator such as a tenuous tendon repair or concerns over patients’ ability to adhere to protocol .
Query!
Study design
Purpose of the study
Treatment
Query!
Allocation to intervention
Randomised controlled trial
Query!
Procedure for enrolling a subject and allocating the treatment (allocation concealment procedures)
Potential participants will be identified by hand physiotherapists while they are in Middlemore Hospital, where they will undergo surgery. Those identified that meet the inclusion criteria will be provided with the participant information sheet whilst they are in hospital. The physiotherapists will ensure that these potential participants have their first outpatient hand therapy appointment booked at the hand therapy department of Manukau SuperClinic (MSC), the outpatient clinic of CMDHB, within the first week after surgery. At this appointment participants will be consented by the treating therapist and randomised by selecting a sealed envelope containing a slip of paper indicating Group A (extensor CAM protocol) or Group B (RMES protocol).
Participants will be referred to their community hand therapist for follow-up therapy. Training in the research protocol will be provided to all therapists who will treat the participants. Participants will be requested to attend assessment appointments at 4 and 8 weeks post-op at the hand therapy department of MSC. Each session will take approximately 60 minutes and where possible these appointments will be co-ordinated with the participants’ surgical review which also takes place at MSC. Funding will be sought to reimburse participants for fuel costs.
Due to the nature of the study it will not be possible to blind the patients to group allocation as the splints for the two protocols are very different in appearance. It will also not be possible to fully blind the assessor as the Sollerman hand function assessment will be performed with the splint in situ at 4 weeks in order to assess how well the participant can use their hand with the splint on. In order to provide partial blinding, an assistant will carry out randomisation of the participants and recording of group allocation and this will not be revealed to the primary investigator. At the 4 and 8 week assessment sessions, the same assistant will carry out the Sollerman hand function assessment in a closed room without the primary investigator. Once the Sollerman hand function assessment is completed the participant will remove the splint and conceal it from view. The primary investigator will then enter and assess the remaining outcomes. Group allocation will only be revealed to the primary investigator once all data for all participants have been collected.
Query!
Methods used to generate the sequence in which subjects will be randomised (sequence generation)
Half of the sealed envelopes will contain a slip of paper indicating group A and the other half will indicate Group B. This is a type of block randomisation as there will be equal numbers of each group. Participants will choose a sealed envelope without knowing which slip of paper it contains.
Query!
Masking / blinding
Blinded (masking used)
Query!
Who is / are masked / blinded?
The people assessing the outcomes
The people analysing the results/data
Query!
Query!
Query!
Query!
Intervention assignment
Parallel
Query!
Other design features
Query!
Phase
Not Applicable
Query!
Type of endpoint/s
Safety/efficacy
Query!
Statistical methods / analysis
Calculation of sample size was undertaken with the assistance of a CMDHB biostatistician, Irene Zeng. No previous data have been published using the Sollerman hand function assessment as the primary outcome for patients with zone V/VI extensor tendon repairs. A recent study used the Sollerman hand function assessment to evaluate patients recovering from a distal radius fracture (Porter, 2013). This provided an estimation of data variability in a patient population who had sustained a traumatic injury to an upper limb, albeit an alternative diagnosis. Data from this study were used to calculate a coefficient of variation. In addition, preliminary testing of the Sollerman was carried out with a group of healthy volunteers from the CMDHB hand therapy department wearing the splints from the two protocols to determine a likely difference in scores between groups. Using the coefficient of variation derived from the distal radius study (13.3%), and the difference in mean scores calculated from the healthy volunteers (10 points), a proposed sample size was derived. With equivalent group sizes, 90% statistical power, 5% type I error and a derived standard deviation of 8.5 and 7.2 respectively for the RMES and extensor CAM groups, it is estimated that each group requires 13 participants. Expected drop-out rate is 30% (Hall et al., 2010) which indicates that 40 patients are required for the total sample. Over the year from June 2012 –May 2013 just over 50 patients who would have met the inclusion criteria were operated on in CMDHB, this is therefore considered an achievable sample size for the study duration.Analysis of the differences in the objective and subjective measures of hand function, number of days to return to work in any capacity, grip strength, range of motion, satisfaction and adherence between control and intervention groups at 4 and at 8 weeks will be carried out by means of a [generalised] mixed linear model [depending on the distribution of the data]. Intervening variables such as gender and ethnicity will be controlled for separately and jointly where appropriate. The frequency distribution of complications in both groups will be compared by a Chi-square test of independence or Fisher exact test depending on the type of data and sample size. Correlations between the objective and subjective measures of hand function and range of motion scores will be investigated using a Pearson correlation coefficient or a Spearman’s rank order correlation, depending on the data, and a Bland-Altman plot will be constructed to assess agreement between the measures.
Query!
Recruitment
Recruitment status
Completed
Query!
Date of first participant enrolment
Anticipated
26/01/2015
Query!
Actual
16/02/2015
Query!
Date of last participant enrolment
Anticipated
1/05/2016
Query!
Actual
19/02/2016
Query!
Date of last data collection
Anticipated
Query!
Actual
15/04/2016
Query!
Sample size
Target
40
Query!
Accrual to date
Query!
Final
42
Query!
Recruitment outside Australia
Country [1]
6551
0
New Zealand
Query!
State/province [1]
6551
0
Auckland
Query!
Funding & Sponsors
Funding source category [1]
290437
0
Hospital
Query!
Name [1]
290437
0
Counties Manukau District Health Board
-Plastics Department
-Ko Awatea
Query!
Address [1]
290437
0
Private Bag 93311
Otahuhu
Manukau
1640
Query!
Country [1]
290437
0
New Zealand
Query!
Funding source category [2]
290438
0
Charities/Societies/Foundations
Query!
Name [2]
290438
0
New Zealand Association of Occupational Therapists
Query!
Address [2]
290438
0
Ipayroll House
Level 3, 93 Boulcott Street
Wellington, 6140
Query!
Country [2]
290438
0
New Zealand
Query!
Funding source category [3]
290439
0
Charities/Societies/Foundations
Query!
Name [3]
290439
0
New Zealand Association of Hand Therapists
Query!
Address [3]
290439
0
41 Boundary Road
Hamilton
New Zealand
3214
Query!
Country [3]
290439
0
New Zealand
Query!
Funding source category [4]
290440
0
University
Query!
Name [4]
290440
0
Auckland University of Technology (AUT)
Query!
Address [4]
290440
0
AUT University
Private Bag 92006
Auckland 1142
New Zealand
Query!
Country [4]
290440
0
New Zealand
Query!
Primary sponsor type
Individual
Query!
Name
Shirley Collocott
Query!
Address
Hand Therapy Department
Module 5
Manukau SuperClinic
901 Great South Road
Manukau
1640
Query!
Country
New Zealand
Query!
Secondary sponsor category [1]
289150
0
None
Query!
Name [1]
289150
0
Query!
Address [1]
289150
0
Query!
Country [1]
289150
0
Query!
Ethics approval
Ethics application status
Approved
Query!
Ethics committee name [1]
292118
0
Southern Health and Disability Ethics Committee
Query!
Ethics committee address [1]
292118
0
Ministry of Health Ethics Department Reception - Ground Floor 20 Aitken Street Thorndon WELLINGTON 6011
Query!
Ethics committee country [1]
292118
0
New Zealand
Query!
Date submitted for ethics approval [1]
292118
0
22/10/2014
Query!
Approval date [1]
292118
0
05/11/2014
Query!
Ethics approval number [1]
292118
0
14/STH/164
Query!
Ethics committee name [2]
292119
0
AUTEC
Query!
Ethics committee address [2]
292119
0
AUTEC Secretariat, room WA 505F, fifth floor, WA Building, City Campus, Wellesley Street, Auckland, 1142
Query!
Ethics committee country [2]
292119
0
New Zealand
Query!
Date submitted for ethics approval [2]
292119
0
10/11/2014
Query!
Approval date [2]
292119
0
18/11/2014
Query!
Ethics approval number [2]
292119
0
14/377
Query!
Summary
Brief summary
Patients who have undergone surgical repair of lacerated extensor tendons on the dorsum of the hand at Counties Manukau District Health Board (CMDHB) are rehabilitated with an early mobilisation protocol known as ‘extensor CAM (Controlled Active Motion)’. An audit of CMDHB patients showed similar joint range of motion outcomes to those reported by other centres using comparable protocols following extensor tendon repair. However, reports from centres where an alternative early mobilisation protocol, Relative Motion Extension Splinting (RMES), has been used show patients returning to work earlier. These reports (Hirth et al., 2011; Howell, Merritt, & Robinson, 2005) suggest that patients rehabilitated with the RMES protocol have an earlier ability to use their hand functionally. To date there are no reports of prospective trials comparing the RMES to other early mobilisation protocols. This study will prospectively compare outcomes of patients managed with an extensor CAM protocol to those managed with an RMES protocol; with the hypothesis that those in the RMES group will demonstrate an earlier return to hand function.
Query!
Trial website
Query!
Trial related presentations / publications
Query!
Public notes
Query!
Contacts
Principal investigator
Name
53602
0
Mrs Shirley Collocott
Query!
Address
53602
0
Hand Therapy Department
Module 5
Manukau SuperClinic
901 Great South Road
Manukau
1640
Query!
Country
53602
0
New Zealand
Query!
Phone
53602
0
+64 21 075 107
Query!
Fax
53602
0
Query!
Email
53602
0
[email protected]
Query!
Contact person for public queries
Name
53603
0
Shirley Collocott
Query!
Address
53603
0
Hand Therapy Department
Module 5
Manukau SuperClinic
901 Great South Road
Manukau
1640
Query!
Country
53603
0
New Zealand
Query!
Phone
53603
0
+64 21 075 107
Query!
Fax
53603
0
Query!
Email
53603
0
[email protected]
Query!
Contact person for scientific queries
Name
53604
0
Shirley Collocott
Query!
Address
53604
0
Hand Therapy Department
Module 5
Manukau SuperClinic
901 Great South Road
Manukau
1640
Query!
Country
53604
0
New Zealand
Query!
Phone
53604
0
+64 21 075 107
Query!
Fax
53604
0
Query!
Email
53604
0
[email protected]
Query!
Data sharing statement
Will individual participant data (IPD) for this trial be available (including data dictionaries)?
Yes
Query!
What data in particular will be shared?
De-identified outcome data
Query!
When will data be available (start and end dates)?
Start date: 24/09/2018
No end date determined
Query!
Available to whom?
To subscribers to Mendeley
Query!
Available for what types of analyses?
It depends on what researchers would like to analyse
Query!
How or where can data be obtained?
It is available on Mendeley
Query!
What supporting documents are/will be available?
No Supporting Document Provided
Results publications and other study-related documents
Documents added manually
No documents have been uploaded by study researchers.
Documents added automatically
Source
Title
Year of Publication
DOI
Embase
A randomized clinical trial comparing early active motion programs: Earlier hand function, TAM, and orthotic satisfaction with a relative motion extension program for zones V and VI extensor tendon repairs.
2020
https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jht.2018.10.003
N.B. These documents automatically identified may not have been verified by the study sponsor.
Download to PDF