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Surgery Shows Longer-Term Benefits for Dupuytren Contracture


 

FROM ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE

Dupuytren contracture can be treated with three invasive methods, but new data from a randomized controlled trial show better 2-year success rates for surgery than for needle fasciotomy and collagenase injection, despite retreatments.

The common hereditary disorder affects the palmar fascia in middle-aged and older people, more often men. The disease typically affects the ring and little fingers and they may curl toward the palm. The disease can’t be cured, but can be eased.

Findings of the study, led by Mikko Petteri Räisänen, MD, with the Department of Orthopedics, Traumatology and Hand Surgery, Kuopio University Hospital, Kuopio, and Tampere University, Tampere, both in Finland, were published online in Annals of Internal Medicine.

Initially, Outcomes Similar

Initially, in the multisite, randomized controlled, outcome assessor–blinded, superiority trial, the outcomes were similar among the treatments, the authors write, but at 2 years only the surgery group maintained the success rate.

The primary outcome was more than 50% contracture release and patients reaching the patient-acceptable symptom state. Secondary outcomes included hand function, pain, patient satisfaction, quality of life, finger flexion, residual contracture angle, risk for retreatment, and serious adverse events.

A total of 292 (97%) and 284 (94%) patients completed the 3-month and 2-year follow ups, respectively.

Success rates at 3 months were similar: 71% (95% CI, 62%-80%) for surgery; 73% (95% CI, 64%-82%) for needle fasciotomy; and 73% (95% CI, 64%-82%) for collagenase injection.

At 2 Years, Surgery Superior

At 2 years, however, surgery had superior success rates. Surgery success rates vs needle fasciotomy were 78% vs 50% (adjusted risk difference, 0.30; 95% CI, 0.17-0.43).

Surgery success rates vs collagenase injection were 78% vs 65% (aRD, 0.13; 95% CI, 0.01-0.26).

“Secondary analyses paralleled with the primary analysis,” the authors write.

Patients may choose surgery despite initial morbidity which includes potential time off work and higher costs than the other options if the long-term outcome is better, the authors write.

“Collagenase is likely a viable alternative to needle fasciotomy only if its costs are substantially reduced,” the authors write.

A strength of the study is its generalizability, as researchers recruited patients in a setting with universal healthcare where few people seek care outside public hospitals.

Another strength of the trial is that the blinded outcome assessors measured the contracture angles with the participant’s hand covered by a rubber glove and patients were instructed not to reveal their treatment group to the assessor.

Some Physicians Offer Noninvasive Treatments First

Family physician Shannon Scott, DO, medical director of the Midwestern University Multispecialty Clinic in Scottsdale, Arizona, treats many patients with the contracture.

In her practice, patients come to her seeking noninvasive options first. But if they are not satisfied with their hand function after noninvasive treatments such as osteopathic manipulative treatment, physical therapy, and a home exercise program, the next steps are the choices compared in the study. The findings of this randomized controlled trial, she says, will help her in counseling patients choosing among those options.

“What’s important for me as a family physician to understand is more about the path that led to this decision” to seek more invasive treatment and whether the patients in the study had first completed a course of noninvasive care, Dr. Scott says.

The condition, especially in the population most affected — older adults — can greatly affect activities of daily living, she noted. Patients may also often have other conditions contributing to the symptoms of Dupuytren contracture in the neck, arm, or shoulder, for instance, that limit range of motion or cause pain. Addressing those symptoms noninvasively may help relieve the contracture, she says.

Asking patients about their goals is essential, Dr. Scott says. “What patients are looking for is function and the definition for one patient may be different than the level of function for another. Many patients get to a desired level of function with nonsurgical options first.”

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