Effect of structured rehabilitation versus non-structured rehabilitation following non-surgical management of displaced proximal humerus fractures: a protocol for a randomised clinical trial

Author:

Liaghat BehnamORCID,Brorson StigORCID

Abstract

IntroductionAn increasing number of patients with displaced proximal humerus fractures (PHF) are being offered non-surgical treatment, including short immobilisation and structured rehabilitation. There are no randomised controlled trials (RCTs) comparing structured rehabilitation with non-structured rehabilitation to investigate the benefits of structured rehabilitation.Methods and analysisIn this RCT, patients with a displaced PHF will be assessed for eligibility at a Danish university outpatient clinic. Patients with competing injuries or patients offered surgery will be excluded, and randomisation will be 1:1. All patients will receive standard orthopaedic follow-up, including 14-day postinjury immobilisation, and advice about returning to activities of daily living before being allocated to structured rehabilitation in the municipalities or non-structured rehabilitation. The primary outcome is the between-group difference in the Oxford Shoulder Score (0–48 points, 48=best, minimal clinically important difference=10) at 6 months. A sample size of 60 patients will allow us to show a 10-point difference with 80% power.Ethics and disseminationFunded by Department of Orthopaedics, Zealand University Hospital (grant number N/A) and Region Zealand Health Science Research Foundation (R32-A1108-B14), 14 January 2022; The Ethics committee in Region Zealand approved (EMN-2022-02449), 8 April 2022. The site opened on 5 May 2022, and the final results will be updated on trial registries, submitted to a peer-reviewed journal, and inform rehabilitation strategies after displaced PHFs. Protocol version 1, 21 April 2022.Trial registration numberNCT05302089.

Funder

Region Zealand Health Science Research Foundation

Department of Orthopaedics, Zealand University Hospital

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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