Comparison of Rigid and Soft-Brace Treatments for Acute Osteoporotic Vertebral Compression Fracture: A Prospective, Randomized, Multicenter Study

Author:

Kato Tsuyoshi,Inose Hiroyuki,Ichimura Shoichi,Tokuhashi YasuakiORCID,Nakamura Hiroaki,Hoshino Masatoshi,Togawa Daisuke,Hirano Toru,Haro Hirotaka,Ohba Tetsuro,Tsuji Takashi,Sato Kimiaki,Sasao Yutaka,Takahata Masahiko,Otani Koji,Momoshima Suketaka,Tateishi Ukihide,Tomita Makoto,Takemasa Ryuichi,Yuasa Masato,Hirai Takashi,Yoshii Toshitaka,Okawa Atsushi

Abstract

While bracing is the standard conservative treatment for acute osteoporotic compression fracture, the efficacy of different brace treatments has not been extensively studied. We aimed to clarify and compare the preventive effect of the different brace treatments on the deformity of the vertebral body and other clinical results in this patient cohort. This multicenter nationwide prospective randomized study included female patients aged 65–85 years with acute one-level osteoporotic compression fractures. We assigned patients within four weeks of injury to either a rigid-brace treatment or a soft-brace treatment. The main outcome measure was the anterior vertebral body compression percentage at 48 weeks. Secondary outcome measures included scores on the European Quality of Life-5 Dimensions (EQ-5D), visual analog scale (VAS) for lower back pain, and the Japanese Orthopaedic Association Back Pain Evaluation Questionnaire (JOABPEQ). A total of 141 patients were assigned to the rigid-brace group, whereas 143 patients were assigned to the soft-brace group. There were no statistically significant differences in the primary outcome and secondary outcome measures between groups. In conclusion, among patients with fresh vertebral compression fractures, the 12-week rigid-brace treatment did not result in a statistically greater prevention of spinal deformity, better quality of life, or lesser back pain than soft-brace.

Funder

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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