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RECRUITING
NCT04458584

Restoration of Thumb Strength and Function in Basal Joint Arthritis: A Comparative Effectiveness Trial (RESTART)

Sponsor: Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the basis for three widely held fundamental tenets about surgical intervention for thumb basal joint arthritis; 1. Trapeziectomy with ligament reconstruction and metacarpal stabilization is associated with superior functional outcomes and strength, 2. Preservation of the arthroplasty space correlates with functional outcomes, pain relief, and restoration of strength after basal joint arthroplasty, and 3. Mitigation of metacarpophalangeal joint (MCPJ) hyperextension optimizes postoperative strength after basal joint arthroplasty, regardless of surgical technique. It is hypothesized that thumb basal joint arthroplasty with metacarpal stabilization, by either ligament reconstruction (I) or suture suspension (II), provides greater improvement in grip and pinch strength, and better hand function, than might be achieved following provision of pain relief alone by simple trapeziectomy (III). Preservation of the arthroplasty space will correlate positively, and MCPJ hyperextension will correlate negatively, with improved thumb function and lateral pinch strength. Primary Aims (within 3 procedure cohorts): 1. Compare pre-operative pinch and grip strength as well as patient-reported outcomes (PROs) for pain in patients before and after lidocaine injection of the trapeziometacarpal joint, prior to thumb basal joint arthroplasty; 2. Compare post-operative pinch and grip strength and PROs for pain and function at 3 and 6 months after thumb basal joint arthroplasty with pre-operative values before and after lidocaine injection; 3. Correlate preservation of dynamic arthroplasty space as measured on a stress radiograph with postoperative improvement in pinch and grip strength, and PROs for pain and function; 4. Correlate dynamic MCP joint position and laxity with change in strength and patient-reported pain and function to define optimal MCPJ position. Secondary Aims (between 3 procedure cohorts): 1. Compare change in pre- and post-operative pinch and grip strength and PROs for pain and function between patients having basal joint arthroplasty with and without specific metacarpal stabilization; 2. Compare preservation of the dynamic arthroplasty space and improvement in strength and patient-reported pain and function between arthroplasty groups; and 3. Compare changes in pinch and grip strength and PROs for pain and function with dynamic MCPJ position between arthroplasty groups. 4. Compare postoperative neuritis and complications between surgical groups.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

21 Years - Any

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

165

Start Date

2020-06-29

Completion Date

2026-12-31

Last Updated

2025-04-13

Healthy Volunteers

Not specified

Interventions

PROCEDURE

Trapeziectomy with ligament reconstruction (I; LRTI)

Thumb basal joint arthroplasty (surgical) using Trapeziectomy with ligament reconstruction (I; LRTI)

PROCEDURE

Trapeziectomy with suture suspensionplasty (II; SS)

Thumb basal joint arthroplasty (surgical) using Trapeziectomy with suture suspension-lastly (II; SS)

PROCEDURE

Arthroscopic Trapeziectomy (III; AT)

Thumb basal joint arthroplasty (surgical) using Arthroscopic Trapeziectomy (III; AT)

Locations (1)

Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center

Lebanon, New Hampshire, United States