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Swiss-wide multicentre evaluation and prediction of core outcomes in arthroscopic rotator cuff repair: protocol for the ARCR_Pred cohort study

Authors :
Alexandre Lädermann
Heiner C C Bucher
Corinne Eicher
Sabina Hunziker
Christian Appenzeller-Herzog
Florian Grubhofer
Soheila Aghlmandi
Alex Marzel
Hans-Kaspar Schwyzer
Fabrizio Moro
Matthias Flury
Barbara Wirth
Markus Scheibel
Laurent Audigé
Philipp Moroder
Sebastian Mueller
Thomas Stojanov
David Schwappach
Christian Candrian
Gregory Cunningham
Holger Durchholz
Karim Eid
Bernhard Jost
Beat Kaspar Moor
Claudio Rosso
Michael Schär
Christophe Spormann
Thomas Suter
Karl Wieser
Matthias Zumstein
Andreas M Müller
Jannine Buchschacher
Lena Fankhauser
Gernot Willscheid
Doruk Akgün
Kathi Thiele
Marvin Minkus
Victor Danzinger
Katrin Karpinski
Claudia Haag-Schumacher
Viviane Steffen
Sarah Fournier
Deborah Marietan
Sebastien Pawlak
Britta Hansen
Ferdinand Lovrek
Marco Zanetti
Nadja Mamisch
Christian Steiner
Georg Ahlbäumer
Jakob Bräm
Jens Fischer
Alexander Delvendahl
Patricia Simao
Abed Khourani
Anne-Sophie Foucault
Frank Kolo
Adrian Schenk
Johannes Weihs
Remy Flückiger
Philipp Scacchi
Paolo Lombardo
Larissa Hübscher
Ralph Berther
Christine Ehrmann
Raffaela Nobs
Richard Niehaus
Nisha Grünberger
Philipp Kriechling
Susanne Bensler
Michael Glanzmann
Florian Freislederer
Manuela Nötzli
Frederik Bellmann
Franz Anne
Jörg Oswald
Cécile Grobet
Marije de Jong
Martina Wehrli
Jan Schätz
Francesco Marbach
Marco Delcogliano
Davide Previtali
Florian Schönweger
Elena Porro
Gabriela Induni-Lang
Giuseppe Filardo
Filippo Del Grande
Pietro Feltri
Schiavon Guglielmo
Christian Spross
Martin Olach
Michael Badulescu
Vilijam Zdravkovic
Stephanie Lüscher
Jörg Scheler
Lena Öhrström
Annabel Hayoz
Frederick Schuster
Julia Müller-Lebschi
Christian Gerber
Samy Bouaicha
Paul Borbas
Anita Hasler
Sabrina Catanzaro
Sabine Wyss
Reto Sutter
Mohy Taha
Cornelia Baum
Ilona Ahlborn
Simone Hatz
Giorgio Tamborrini-Schütz
Source :
BMJ Open, Vol 11, Iss 4 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2021.

Abstract

Introduction In the field of arthroscopic rotator cuff repair (ARCR), reporting standards of published studies differ dramatically, notably concerning adverse events (AEs). In addition, prognostic studies are overall methodologically poor, based on small data sets and explore only limited numbers of influencing factors. We aim to develop prognostic models for individual ARCR patients, primarily for the patient-reported assessment of shoulder function (Oxford Shoulder Score (OSS)) and the occurrence of shoulder stiffness 6 months after surgery. We also aim to evaluate the use of a consensus core event set (CES) for AEs and validate a severity classification for these events, considering the patient’s perspective.Methods and analysis A cohort of 970 primary ARCR patients will be prospectively documented from several Swiss and German orthopaedic clinics up to 24 months postoperatively. Patient clinical examinations at 6 and 12 months will include shoulder range of motion and strength (Constant Score). Tendon repair integrity status will be assessed by ultrasound at 12 months. Patient-reported questionnaires at 6, 12 and 24 months will determine functional scores (subjective shoulder value, OSS), anxiety and depression scores, working status, sports activities, and quality of life (European Quality of Life 5 Dimensions 5 Level questionnaire). AEs will be documented according to a CES. Prognostic models will be developed using an internationally supported regression methodology. Multiple prognostic factors, including patient baseline demographics, psychological, socioeconomic and clinical factors, rotator cuff integrity, concomitant local findings, and (post)operative management factors, will be investigated.Ethics and dissemination This project contributes to the development of personalised risk predictions for supporting the surgical decision process in ARCR. The consensus CES may become an international reference for the reporting of complications in clinical studies and registries. Ethical approval was obtained on 1 April 2020 from the lead ethics committee (EKNZ, Basel, Switzerland; ID: 2019-02076). All participants will provide informed written consent before enrolment in the study.Trial registration number NCT04321005.Protocol version Version 2 (13 December 2019).

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
11
Issue :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMJ Open
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.47b79dab1cc44dd7bcd15ae8c4581cfb
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2020-045702