NCT04748484

Brief Summary

Neuropathic pain is common in limb amputees and causes reductions in activity and participation as well as impaired quality of life. Some of these pains lead to the diagnosis of a responsible lesion and to precise and effective treatments (amputation neuroma pains, for example), whether they are etiological or symptomatic. Other pains of a neuropathic character remain totally or partially resistant to symptomatic treatment. Their appearance, intensity, duration and frequency vary depending on the amputee. Old scientific data confirmed by modern imagery indicates a process of reorganization of cortical areas by multimodal afferents. This reconstruction, coherent or not of the body diagram, is at the genesis of sensations, normal or not, in the amputee. Early plurimodal reassignment constitutes the founding principle of the rehabilitation of amputees: tactile afferents, visual afferents, motor afferents, proprioceptive afferents. Rehabilitation techniques and early fitting contribute to this reafferentation and to the functional integration of the fitting and to the quality of life of the amputee. Scientific work by Katz et al, and experiences of amputees relieved by the application of local heat or stay in hot climatic zones show that the thermoregulation of the residual limb could be of interest. It has been shown that these pain conditions are often related to a reduction in superficial blood flow to the distal part of the stump. The physiological response of the body to variations in outside temperature physiologically consists in the regulation of skin temperature. The goal seems to keep the body in a so-called "thermal neutrality" zone, substantially between 30 ° C and 33 ° C, by vasodilation or vasoconstriction of the superficial blood vessels depending on exposure to cold or heat. An innovative medical device has been developed for a regulated thermal re-afferentation of the residual limb, during and outside the wearing of the prosthesis. The Connected Caloprosthesis Kit (CCK®) includes a connected sleeve put in place when wearing the prosthesis (interface between the skin and the socket) and a connected sock to put in place outside of wearing the prosthesis. These 2 devices include an autonomous heating and regulation process, which maintains the amputation stump in the area known as "skin thermal normality". This device is non-invasive. It includes a silicone sleeve and a heating sock for femoral or tibial amputee patients equipped with an expandable textile warmer, a flexible micro-temperature sensor and a 4-conductor extensible cable connected to a thermoregulation box worn as a belt which regulates the temperature of the stumps in the thermal neutrality zone between 30 and 33°C. In order to assess the therapeutic effect of CCK®, given the heterogeneity of the population and the small number of patients eligible for the study, the Single Case Experimental Design (multiple baselines design) seems to us to be the methodology the most suitable: the principle is to evaluate intensively and prospectively a small group of subjects, each case being its own comparator. The methodology is defined a priori including systematic observations and repeated measurements at a defined frequency before, during, or even after the intervention introduced in a sequential and randomized manner. The data analysis can be individual and therefore patient-specific, but also group with the calculation of the size of the therapeutic effect and the calculation of significance. This design therefore makes it possible to overcome the difficulties encountered during randomized controlled trials: having to have a large number of subjects necessary to show a significant difference in the medical device and to have a homogeneous population. This methodology is therefore not a description of a clinical case but an alternative methodology to randomized controlled trials. In fact, it is considered by the Oxford Center for Evidence-Based Medicine 2011 to be level I, like the randomized controlled trials. The proposed clinical study therefore has a dual objective: practical as a new treatment therapy by validating this medical device and theoretical, supporting the pathogenic model of painful sensations in amputees

Trial Health

57
Monitor

Trial Health Score

Automated assessment based on enrollment pace, timeline, and geographic reach

Trial has exceeded expected completion date
Enrollment
12

participants targeted

Target at below P25 for not_applicable

Timeline
Completed

Started Apr 2021

Longer than P75 for not_applicable

Geographic Reach
1 country

4 active sites

Status
recruiting

Health score is calculated from publicly available data and should be used for screening purposes only.

Trial Relationships

Click on a node to explore related trials.

Study Timeline

Key milestones and dates

First Submitted

Initial submission to the registry

January 11, 2021

Completed
1 month until next milestone

First Posted

Study publicly available on registry

February 10, 2021

Completed
2 months until next milestone

Study Start

First participant enrolled

April 21, 2021

Completed
3.9 years until next milestone

Primary Completion

Last participant's last visit for primary outcome

March 1, 2025

Completed
Same day until next milestone

Study Completion

Last participant's last visit for all outcomes

March 1, 2025

Completed
Last Updated

May 29, 2024

Status Verified

May 1, 2024

Enrollment Period

3.9 years

First QC Date

January 11, 2021

Last Update Submit

May 26, 2024

Conditions

Keywords

phantom limb painSCEDmedical device

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcomes (1)

  • Intensity of the overall pain (background pain and paroxysmal pain) on 0-10 numerical scale

    The primary judgment criteria will be the evaluation of the intensity of the overall pain (background pain and paroxysmal pain) on 0-10 numerical scale over the last 48 hours measured three times a week during the follow up of the patient

    Up to 5 months

Study Arms (1)

KCC active or inactive

OTHER

The medical device KCC will be active, or inactive. Randomization will define when and how long time the medical device will be active, and when and how long time the medical device will be inactive. The patient won't know if the medical device is active or not. The battery charge indicator will work the same whether the device is operating or not.

Device: KCC Active or inactive

Interventions

Depending of the randomization, the KCC will be active or inactive, and will provide heat when active, but the patient won't know if the medical device is active or not. The battery charge indicator will work the same whether the device is operating or not.

KCC active or inactive

Eligibility Criteria

Age18 Years+
Sexall
Healthy VolunteersNo
Age GroupsAdult (18-64), Older Adult (65+)

You may qualify if:

  • Patient seen in consultation motivated by residual limb pain
  • Adult with background pain (Lickert scale ≥ 5/10) or with pain attacks (Lickert scale ≥ 5/10) whose frequency is more than once per week
  • Patient with a DN4 score \> 4/10 (Score validated in neuropathic pain)
  • Patient with trans-femoral or trans-tibial amputation
  • Patient whose amputation was over 1 year ago regardless of the aetiology of his amputation.

You may not qualify if:

  • Patient :
  • under 18 year old
  • With a silicone allergy
  • Usually fitted by means of suspension by a seal in sleeve, by suspension by vacuum pump requiring a polyurethane sleeve
  • Presenting any pathology of the stump explaining the pain on clinical arguments, complemented if necessary by additional investigations: neuroma, bone or vascular pathology or conflicts with the socket…
  • With bilateral lower limb amputation
  • Not being able to use a Smartphone
  • Not wishing to participate in the study
  • Adult subject to legal protection or unable to express consent
  • Pregnant or breastfeeding females.

Contact the study team to confirm eligibility.

Sponsors & Collaborators

Study Sites (4)

Hôpital d'Instruction des Armées Percy -

Clamart, 92140, France

RECRUITING

Irr Nancy

Nancy, 54000, France

RECRUITING

CRF La Tourmaline

Saint-Herblain, 44818, France

NOT YET RECRUITING

Institut Universitaire de Réadaptation Clemenceau

Strasbourg, 67000, France

NOT YET RECRUITING

MeSH Terms

Conditions

NeuralgiaPhantom Limb

Condition Hierarchy (Ancestors)

Peripheral Nervous System DiseasesNeuromuscular DiseasesNervous System DiseasesPainNeurologic ManifestationsSigns and SymptomsPathological Conditions, Signs and SymptomsPerceptual DisordersNeurobehavioral ManifestationsPain, PostoperativePostoperative ComplicationsPathologic Processes

Central Study Contacts

Study Design

Study Type
interventional
Phase
not applicable
Allocation
NA
Masking
NONE
Masking Details
The medical device will be active or inactive, but the patient nor the investigator won't know if the medical device is active or not. The battery charge indicator will work the same whether the device is operating or not.
Purpose
TREATMENT
Intervention Model
SINGLE GROUP
Model Details: Single case experimental design : the principle is to evaluate intensively and prospectively a small group of subjects, each case being its own comparator
Sponsor Type
INDUSTRY
Responsible Party
SPONSOR

Study Record Dates

First Submitted

January 11, 2021

First Posted

February 10, 2021

Study Start

April 21, 2021

Primary Completion

March 1, 2025

Study Completion

March 1, 2025

Last Updated

May 29, 2024

Record last verified: 2024-05

Locations