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Intramedullary nails versus distal locking plates for fracture of the distal femur: results from the Trial of Acute Femoral Fracture Fixation (TrAFFix) randomised feasibility study and process evaluation

Intramedullary nails versus distal locking plates for fracture of the distal femur: results from the Trial of Acute Femoral Fracture Fixation (TrAFFix) randomised feasibility study and process evaluation
Intramedullary nails versus distal locking plates for fracture of the distal femur: results from the Trial of Acute Femoral Fracture Fixation (TrAFFix) randomised feasibility study and process evaluation
Objectives This feasibility study and process evaluation assessed the likely success of a definitive trial of intramedullary fixation with locked retrograde nails versus extramedullary fixation with fixed angle plates for fractures of the distal femur. Design & setting A multicentre, parallel, two-arm, randomised controlled feasibility study with an embedded process evaluation was conducted at seven NHS hospitals in England. Treatment was randomly allocated in 1:1 ratio, stratified by centre and chronic cognitive impairment. Participants, but not surgeons or research staff, were blinded to the allocation. Participants Patients 18 years and older with a fracture of the distal femur, who their surgeon believed would benefit from internal fixation, were eligible to take part.Participants were allocated to receive either a retrograde intramedullary nail or an anatomical locking plate. Outcomes The primary outcomes for this feasibility study were the recruitment rate and completion rate of the EQ-5D-5L at 4 months post-randomisation. Baseline characteristics, disability rating index, quality of life scores, measurements of social support and self-efficacy, resource use and radiographic assessments were also collected. The views of patients and staff were collected during interviews. Results Recruitment and data completion were lower than expected. 23 of 82 eligible patients were recruited (nail, 11; plate, 12). The recruitment rate was estimated as 0.42 (95% CI 0.27 to 0.62) participants per centre-month. Data completeness of the EQ-5D-5L at 4 months was 61 per cent (95% CI 43% to 83%). The process evaluation demonstrated that the main barriers to recruitment were variation in treatment pathways across centres, lack of surgeon equipoise and confidence in using both interventions and newly formed research cultures that lacked cohesion. Conclusions A modified trial design, with embedded recruitment support intervention, comparing functional outcome in cognitively intact adults who have sustained a fragility fracture of the distal femur is feasible. Ethics approval The Wales Research Ethics Committee 5 approved the study (ref: 16/WA/0225). Trial registration number ISRCTN92089567; Pre-results.
2044-6055
Griffin, X.L.
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Costa, M.L.
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Phelps, E.
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Parsons, N.
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Dritsaki, M.
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Achten, J.
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Tutton, E.
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Lerner, Robin G.
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McGibbon, A.
b070d576-fdfc-4180-a858-cad483a67188
Baird, J.
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Griffin, X.L.
95c2a79c-af80-47c8-9475-338eb506aa7a
Costa, M.L.
49159f2e-f22f-406b-905c-a0e81f5f70d5
Phelps, E.
aeb9306e-cb34-44e3-bb08-87e9b6acffec
Parsons, N.
5317e3ff-2f13-40ac-af03-a0e9895a4abc
Dritsaki, M.
d2ac5527-171e-4aa1-a692-d6c10a327f8a
Achten, J.
302b6489-d0fe-433f-abe1-ce9d454308e5
Tutton, E.
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Lerner, Robin G.
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McGibbon, A.
b070d576-fdfc-4180-a858-cad483a67188
Baird, J.
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Griffin, X.L., Costa, M.L., Phelps, E., Parsons, N., Dritsaki, M., Achten, J., Tutton, E., Lerner, Robin G., McGibbon, A. and Baird, J. (2019) Intramedullary nails versus distal locking plates for fracture of the distal femur: results from the Trial of Acute Femoral Fracture Fixation (TrAFFix) randomised feasibility study and process evaluation. BMJ Open, 9 (5), [e026810]. (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2018-026810).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives This feasibility study and process evaluation assessed the likely success of a definitive trial of intramedullary fixation with locked retrograde nails versus extramedullary fixation with fixed angle plates for fractures of the distal femur. Design & setting A multicentre, parallel, two-arm, randomised controlled feasibility study with an embedded process evaluation was conducted at seven NHS hospitals in England. Treatment was randomly allocated in 1:1 ratio, stratified by centre and chronic cognitive impairment. Participants, but not surgeons or research staff, were blinded to the allocation. Participants Patients 18 years and older with a fracture of the distal femur, who their surgeon believed would benefit from internal fixation, were eligible to take part.Participants were allocated to receive either a retrograde intramedullary nail or an anatomical locking plate. Outcomes The primary outcomes for this feasibility study were the recruitment rate and completion rate of the EQ-5D-5L at 4 months post-randomisation. Baseline characteristics, disability rating index, quality of life scores, measurements of social support and self-efficacy, resource use and radiographic assessments were also collected. The views of patients and staff were collected during interviews. Results Recruitment and data completion were lower than expected. 23 of 82 eligible patients were recruited (nail, 11; plate, 12). The recruitment rate was estimated as 0.42 (95% CI 0.27 to 0.62) participants per centre-month. Data completeness of the EQ-5D-5L at 4 months was 61 per cent (95% CI 43% to 83%). The process evaluation demonstrated that the main barriers to recruitment were variation in treatment pathways across centres, lack of surgeon equipoise and confidence in using both interventions and newly formed research cultures that lacked cohesion. Conclusions A modified trial design, with embedded recruitment support intervention, comparing functional outcome in cognitively intact adults who have sustained a fragility fracture of the distal femur is feasible. Ethics approval The Wales Research Ethics Committee 5 approved the study (ref: 16/WA/0225). Trial registration number ISRCTN92089567; Pre-results.

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Accepted/In Press date: 1 April 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 May 2019

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Local EPrints ID: 430922
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/430922
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: 89f60f7a-8601-4669-9893-ad779afc1e94
ORCID for J. Baird: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4039-4361

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Date deposited: 17 May 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:29

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Contributors

Author: X.L. Griffin
Author: M.L. Costa
Author: E. Phelps
Author: N. Parsons
Author: M. Dritsaki
Author: J. Achten
Author: E. Tutton
Author: Robin G. Lerner
Author: A. McGibbon
Author: J. Baird ORCID iD

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