Acute Rehabilitation following Traumatic anterior shoulder dISlocAtioN (ARTISAN): protocol for a multicentre randomised controlled trial

Abstract

Introduction First-time traumatic anterior shoulder dislocation (TASD) is predominantly managed non-operatively. People sustaining TASD have ongoing pain, disability and future risk of redislocation. There are no published randomised controlled trials (RCTs) comparing different non-operative rehabilitation strategies to ascertain the optimum clinically effective approach after TASD.

Methods and analysis In this multicentre adaptive RCT, with internal pilot, adults with a radiologically confirmed first time TASD treated non-surgically will be screened at a minimum of 30 sites. People with neurovascular complications, bilateral dislocations or are unable to attend physiotherapy will be excluded.

Randomisation will be on a 1:1 treatment allocation, stratified by age, hand dominance and site. Participants will receive a single session of advice; or a single session of advice plus offer of further physiotherapy (maximum 4 months). The primary analysis will be the difference in Oxford Shoulder Instability Score at 6 months. A sample size of a minimum of 478 participants will allow us to show a four point difference with 90% power.

An embedded qualitative study will explore the participants’ experiences of the trial interventions.

Description

Keywords

acute rehabilitation, traumatic anterior shoulder dislocation, randomised controlled trial

Citation

Kearney RS, Parsons N, Ellard D, Parsons H, Karasouli E, Mason J, Underwood M, Brown J, Liew ZH, Nwankwo H. Drew S, Modi C, Bush H, Torgerson D. (2020) Acute rehabilitation following traumatic anterior shoulder dislocation (ARTISAN): protocol for a multicentre randomised controlled trial. BMJ Open, 10:e040623

Rights

Research Institute