Cargando…

Platelet rich plasma injection for acute Achilles tendon rupture: PATH-2 randomised, placebo controlled, superiority trial

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether an injection of platelet rich plasma improves outcomes after acute Achilles tendon rupture. DESIGN: Randomised, placebo controlled, two arm, parallel group, participant and assessor masked, superiority trial. SETTING: Secondary care trauma units across 19 hospitals in...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Keene, David J, Alsousou, Joseph, Harrison, Paul, Hulley, Philippa, Wagland, Susan, Parsons, Scott R, Thompson, Jacqueline Y, O’Connor, Heather M, Schlüssel, Michael Maia, Dutton, Susan J, Lamb, Sarah E, Willett, Keith
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6863552/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31748208
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.l6132
_version_ 1783471728577478656
author Keene, David J
Alsousou, Joseph
Harrison, Paul
Hulley, Philippa
Wagland, Susan
Parsons, Scott R
Thompson, Jacqueline Y
O’Connor, Heather M
Schlüssel, Michael Maia
Dutton, Susan J
Lamb, Sarah E
Willett, Keith
author_facet Keene, David J
Alsousou, Joseph
Harrison, Paul
Hulley, Philippa
Wagland, Susan
Parsons, Scott R
Thompson, Jacqueline Y
O’Connor, Heather M
Schlüssel, Michael Maia
Dutton, Susan J
Lamb, Sarah E
Willett, Keith
author_sort Keene, David J
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To determine whether an injection of platelet rich plasma improves outcomes after acute Achilles tendon rupture. DESIGN: Randomised, placebo controlled, two arm, parallel group, participant and assessor masked, superiority trial. SETTING: Secondary care trauma units across 19 hospitals in the United Kingdom’s health service. PARTICIPANTS: Recruitment commenced in July 2015 and follow-up was completed in March 2018. 230 adults aged 18 years and over were included, with acute Achilles tendon rupture presenting within 12 days of injury and managed with non-surgical treatment. Exclusions were injury at the insertion or musculotendinous junction, major leg injury or deformity, diabetes mellitus, platelet or haematological disorder, systemic corticosteroids, anticoagulation treatment, and other contraindicating conditions. INTERVENTIONS: Participants were randomised 1:1 to platelet rich plasma (n=114) or placebo (dry needle; n=116) injection. All participants received standard rehabilitation care (ankle immobilisation followed by physiotherapy). MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Primary outcome was muscle tendon function at 24 weeks, measured objectively with the limb symmetry index (injured/uninjured×100) in maximal work done during the heel rise endurance test (an instrumented measure of repeated single leg heel rises until fatigue). Secondary outcomes included patient reported function (Achilles tendon rupture score), quality of life (short form 12 version 2®), pain (visual analogue scale), goal attainment (patient specific functional scale), and adverse events. A central laboratory analysed the quality and content of platelet rich plasma. Analyses were by modified intention to treat. RESULTS: Participants were 46 years old on average, and 57 (25%) of 230 were female. At 24 weeks, 202 (88%) participants completed the heel rise endurance test and 216 (94%) the patient reported outcomes. The platelet rich plasma was of good quality, with expected growth factor content. No difference was detected in muscle tendon function between participants receiving platelet rich plasma injections and those receiving placebo injections (limb symmetry index, mean 34.7% (standard deviation 17.7%) v 38.5% (22.8%); adjusted mean difference −3.9% (95% confidence interval −10.5% to 2.7%)) or in any secondary outcomes or adverse event rates. Complier average causal effect analyses gave similar findings. CONCLUSIONS: There is no evidence to indicate that injections of platelet rich plasma can improve objective muscle tendon function, patient reported function, or quality of life after acute Achilles tendon rupture compared with placebo, or that they offer any patient benefit. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN54992179.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6863552
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-68635522019-12-03 Platelet rich plasma injection for acute Achilles tendon rupture: PATH-2 randomised, placebo controlled, superiority trial Keene, David J Alsousou, Joseph Harrison, Paul Hulley, Philippa Wagland, Susan Parsons, Scott R Thompson, Jacqueline Y O’Connor, Heather M Schlüssel, Michael Maia Dutton, Susan J Lamb, Sarah E Willett, Keith BMJ Research OBJECTIVE: To determine whether an injection of platelet rich plasma improves outcomes after acute Achilles tendon rupture. DESIGN: Randomised, placebo controlled, two arm, parallel group, participant and assessor masked, superiority trial. SETTING: Secondary care trauma units across 19 hospitals in the United Kingdom’s health service. PARTICIPANTS: Recruitment commenced in July 2015 and follow-up was completed in March 2018. 230 adults aged 18 years and over were included, with acute Achilles tendon rupture presenting within 12 days of injury and managed with non-surgical treatment. Exclusions were injury at the insertion or musculotendinous junction, major leg injury or deformity, diabetes mellitus, platelet or haematological disorder, systemic corticosteroids, anticoagulation treatment, and other contraindicating conditions. INTERVENTIONS: Participants were randomised 1:1 to platelet rich plasma (n=114) or placebo (dry needle; n=116) injection. All participants received standard rehabilitation care (ankle immobilisation followed by physiotherapy). MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Primary outcome was muscle tendon function at 24 weeks, measured objectively with the limb symmetry index (injured/uninjured×100) in maximal work done during the heel rise endurance test (an instrumented measure of repeated single leg heel rises until fatigue). Secondary outcomes included patient reported function (Achilles tendon rupture score), quality of life (short form 12 version 2®), pain (visual analogue scale), goal attainment (patient specific functional scale), and adverse events. A central laboratory analysed the quality and content of platelet rich plasma. Analyses were by modified intention to treat. RESULTS: Participants were 46 years old on average, and 57 (25%) of 230 were female. At 24 weeks, 202 (88%) participants completed the heel rise endurance test and 216 (94%) the patient reported outcomes. The platelet rich plasma was of good quality, with expected growth factor content. No difference was detected in muscle tendon function between participants receiving platelet rich plasma injections and those receiving placebo injections (limb symmetry index, mean 34.7% (standard deviation 17.7%) v 38.5% (22.8%); adjusted mean difference −3.9% (95% confidence interval −10.5% to 2.7%)) or in any secondary outcomes or adverse event rates. Complier average causal effect analyses gave similar findings. CONCLUSIONS: There is no evidence to indicate that injections of platelet rich plasma can improve objective muscle tendon function, patient reported function, or quality of life after acute Achilles tendon rupture compared with placebo, or that they offer any patient benefit. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ISRCTN54992179. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2019-11-20 /pmc/articles/PMC6863552/ /pubmed/31748208 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.l6132 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt and build upon this work, for commercial use, provided the original work is properly cited. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Research
Keene, David J
Alsousou, Joseph
Harrison, Paul
Hulley, Philippa
Wagland, Susan
Parsons, Scott R
Thompson, Jacqueline Y
O’Connor, Heather M
Schlüssel, Michael Maia
Dutton, Susan J
Lamb, Sarah E
Willett, Keith
Platelet rich plasma injection for acute Achilles tendon rupture: PATH-2 randomised, placebo controlled, superiority trial
title Platelet rich plasma injection for acute Achilles tendon rupture: PATH-2 randomised, placebo controlled, superiority trial
title_full Platelet rich plasma injection for acute Achilles tendon rupture: PATH-2 randomised, placebo controlled, superiority trial
title_fullStr Platelet rich plasma injection for acute Achilles tendon rupture: PATH-2 randomised, placebo controlled, superiority trial
title_full_unstemmed Platelet rich plasma injection for acute Achilles tendon rupture: PATH-2 randomised, placebo controlled, superiority trial
title_short Platelet rich plasma injection for acute Achilles tendon rupture: PATH-2 randomised, placebo controlled, superiority trial
title_sort platelet rich plasma injection for acute achilles tendon rupture: path-2 randomised, placebo controlled, superiority trial
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6863552/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31748208
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.l6132
work_keys_str_mv AT keenedavidj plateletrichplasmainjectionforacuteachillestendonrupturepath2randomisedplacebocontrolledsuperioritytrial
AT alsousoujoseph plateletrichplasmainjectionforacuteachillestendonrupturepath2randomisedplacebocontrolledsuperioritytrial
AT harrisonpaul plateletrichplasmainjectionforacuteachillestendonrupturepath2randomisedplacebocontrolledsuperioritytrial
AT hulleyphilippa plateletrichplasmainjectionforacuteachillestendonrupturepath2randomisedplacebocontrolledsuperioritytrial
AT waglandsusan plateletrichplasmainjectionforacuteachillestendonrupturepath2randomisedplacebocontrolledsuperioritytrial
AT parsonsscottr plateletrichplasmainjectionforacuteachillestendonrupturepath2randomisedplacebocontrolledsuperioritytrial
AT thompsonjacqueliney plateletrichplasmainjectionforacuteachillestendonrupturepath2randomisedplacebocontrolledsuperioritytrial
AT oconnorheatherm plateletrichplasmainjectionforacuteachillestendonrupturepath2randomisedplacebocontrolledsuperioritytrial
AT schlusselmichaelmaia plateletrichplasmainjectionforacuteachillestendonrupturepath2randomisedplacebocontrolledsuperioritytrial
AT duttonsusanj plateletrichplasmainjectionforacuteachillestendonrupturepath2randomisedplacebocontrolledsuperioritytrial
AT lambsarahe plateletrichplasmainjectionforacuteachillestendonrupturepath2randomisedplacebocontrolledsuperioritytrial
AT willettkeith plateletrichplasmainjectionforacuteachillestendonrupturepath2randomisedplacebocontrolledsuperioritytrial