Clinical Research Directory
Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.
Comparison of Radiological Outcome of Conventional vs Accelerated Ponseti Casting Technique for Treatment of Club Foot
Sponsor: Khyber Medical University Peshawar
Summary
Club foot (congenital talipes equinovarus) is a common birth deformity affecting 1-2 per 1,000 live births, with even higher rates in low-income countries. The standard treatment is the Ponseti method using weekly serial casts, but weekly visits for several weeks can be challenging for families in hot climates or with limited resources. This randomized controlled trial compares the standard once-weekly Ponseti casting with an accelerated twice-weekly casting technique. The primary outcome is radiological correction measured by the lateral talocalcaneal angle (target ≥35°) on standardized foot X-rays taken six weeks after brace fitting. Secondary outcomes include the talocalcaneal index (\>40) and the tibio-calcaneal (dorsiflexion) angle (60-90°). Babies under six months of age with idiopathic club foot will be randomly assigned to either the standard or accelerated casting group. All other aspects of the Ponseti method (manipulation, number of casts, tenotomy when needed, final cast for three weeks, and foot abduction orthosis) remain identical. Adverse events such as skin problems, swelling, or cast complications will be recorded. The study aims to determine whether accelerated casting achieves better radiographic correction without increasing risks.
Official title: Comparison of Radiological Outcome of Conventional vs Accelerated Ponseti Casting Technique for Treatment of Club Foot: Randomized Controlled Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
1 Day - 5 Months
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
144
Start Date
2026-02-01
Completion Date
2026-11-25
Last Updated
2026-04-28
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Ponseti Casting
Participants receive serial manipulation and plaster cast application according to the standard Ponseti technique to correct clubfoot deformity (cavus, adduction, varus, and equinus). A long-leg plaster cast is applied after each manipulation session. Casts are changed either once weekly (every Monday) for the standard group or twice weekly (Monday and Friday) for the accelerated group. Typically 5 to 6 casts are required over the treatment course. When all deformities except equinus are corrected, a percutaneous tendo Achillis tenotomy is performed under local anesthesia in the clinic, followed by a final cast worn continuously for three weeks. After final cast removal, a foot abduction orthosis (Miracle Feet brace) is applied and worn full-time for the first three months, then nights only until the child reaches five years of age. Radiological outcome is assessed six weeks after brace fitting.
Accelerated Ponseti Casting
erial manipulation and long-leg plaster cast applied twice every week (every Monday and Friday) until clubfoot correction is achieved. Typically 5-6 casts are applied over 2.5-3 weeks. This is the only difference compared to the standard arm. Tenotomy is performed under local anesthesia in the clinic when residual equinus remains after serial casting. A tenotomy knife is used to transect the Achilles tendon percutaneously, followed by a final cast for 3 weeks. This procedure is identical in both study arms.
Locations (1)
Khyber Teaching Hospital
Peshawar, KPK, Pakistan