To compare the efficacy and safety of balloon kyphoplasty (BKP) to non-surgical management (NSM) over 24 months in patients with acute painful fractures by clinical outcomes and vertebral body kyphosis correction and surgical parameters. Three hundred Adult patients with one to three VCF's were randomised within 3 months of the acute fracture; 149 to Balloon Kyphoplasty and 151 to Non-surgical management. Subjective QOL assessments and objective functional (Timed up and go [TUG]) and vertebral body kyphotic angulation (KA), were assessed over 24 months; we also report surgical parameters and adverse events temporally related to surgery (within 30-days).Purpose
Material and Methods
Balloon kyphoplasty (BKP) is a minimally invasive treatment for vertebral fractures (VCF) aiming to correct deformity using balloon tamps and bone cement to stabilize the body. Patients with 1 - 3 non-traumatic acute VCF were enrolled within three months of diagnosis and randomly assigned to receive either BKP (N=149) or nonsurgical care (N=151). Follow-up was 2 years. The mean SF-36 physical component summary (PCS) score improved 5.1 points (95%CI, 2.8-7.4; p<0.0001) more in the kyphoplasty than the nonsurgical group at one month, the primary endpoint of the study. Kyphoplasty improved the PCS score by an average of 3.0 points (95%CI, 1.6-5.4; p=0.002) during the two-year follow-up. There was a significant interaction between treatment and follow-up time (p=0.003), indicating that the treatment effect over the year is not uniform across follow-up; a result from early improvement that persists in the kyphoplasty group whereas the nonsurgical group shows more incremental improvement over time. Overall, patients assigned to kyphoplasty also had statistically significant improvements over the two years compared to the control group in global quality of life (EQ-5D), pain relief (VAS), back disability (RMDQ) and days of limited activity (within a two-week period). There was no statistical significant difference between groups in the number of patients with adverse events or new VCF's over 24 months. Compared to the control, BKP improved quality of life and reduced back pain and disability and did not increase adverse events including the risk of new vertebral fractures over 2 years.
Vertebral body compression fractures (VCFs) impair quality of life (QOL) and increase patient morbidity and mortality. The international, multicentre, randomised, controlled Fracture Reduction Evaluation (FREE) trial was initiated to compare effectiveness and safety of Balloon kyphoplasty (BKP) to non-surgical management (NSM) for the treatment of acute painful VCFs. We describe the primary endpoint of the ongoing 2-year study. Patients with 1-3 non-traumatic VCFs (< 3 months old) were randomised to either BKP or NSM. The primary endpoint was the change in QOL as measured by the SF-36 Health Survey Physical Component Summary (PCS) at one month, and device/procedure-related safety. Secondary endpoints included SF-36 subscales, the EQ-5D, self-reported back pain and function using the Roland Morris Disability Questionnaire (RMDQ). All patients were given osteoporosis medical therapy.Background
Methods
Fracture prevention has so far been studied in patients included on the basis of low bone density, and not after a fracture. In this study the inclusion criteria was a new hip fracture irrespective of bone density. An international, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group trial (HORIZON-RFT) studied whether the bisphosphonate, zoledronic acid (ZOL) 5 mg, reduced subsequent clinical fractures in men and women ≥50 yrs after a hip fracture.
Overall, the most significant predictors of poor functional status one year after fracture were increasing age (p=0.005), living in an institution at time of injury (p=0.034), and poor functional status at discharge (p<
0.001).
The RR was significantly higher in men than in women after wrist fracture (p=0.002), but not after spine fracture (p=0.12).