Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Active, not recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
Knee Osteoarthritis
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentMasking: None (Open Label)Primary Purpose: Treatment

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 40 years and 125 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

The design of the study is a single layer multicentre superiority type randomised controlled trial of unilateral knee replacement patients. The randomised controlled trial design will help reduce and prevent potential bias influencing the evaluation. Participants will be randomised to either UKR or ...

The design of the study is a single layer multicentre superiority type randomised controlled trial of unilateral knee replacement patients. The randomised controlled trial design will help reduce and prevent potential bias influencing the evaluation. Participants will be randomised to either UKR or TKR. The trial has a combined equipoise/expertise approach. It enables surgeons who are not in equipoise to deliver only one of the two operations while also allowing surgeons in equipoise to provide both operations. A surgeon who is in equipoise ('equipoise surgeon') and has sufficient experience to perform both TKR and UKR will deliver the allocated operation (UKR or TKR). The same surgeon will perform the operation for both arms of the study. Not all surgeons are able to exhibit this equipoise. They may hold a preference for one treatment over the other often due to experience/expertise with one type of operation. Interestingly, a surgeon may also believe the patient may benefit from one particular operation even though they may not be able to perform it themselves. Equipoise is difficult to investigate or establish. Self declaration has been used as the main approach but in order to sufficiently secure this state the following aspects are important: The equipoise considered must be patient- or individual-based equipoise rather than an overall or general category equipoise based on operation type. The surgeon must consider their position for each individual patient. Only if they believe that either operation will be suitable for an individual patient can the patient then be recruited. No surgeon will ever knowingly perform what they consider a substandard surgical procedure. In order to complete the trial by seeking to maximise surgeon participation, an 'expertise'-based delivery of the intervention will also occur. For this approach there must be a surgeon with expertise in TKR and a surgeon with expertise in UKR in the same centre who will act together as a 'delivery unit'. Patients recruited to the study who are under the care of such a surgeon ('expertise surgeon') will be randomised to one of the two groups and treated by the appropriate surgeon. This 'expertise' approach allows for those UKR surgeons who work alongside TKR surgeons to team up and participate in the study. Subsequent surgery may be carried out by a surgeon different to that at the initial consultation. In such cases the patient is internally referred to the other surgeon's operating list. No restriction is made upon the number of delivery units within a centre. A surgeon can only be in one delivery unit, that is, they are either an 'equipoise surgeon' or an 'expertise surgeon'.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT01352247
Collaborators
University of Aberdeen
Investigators
Principal Investigator: David Beard, DPhil University of Oxford