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Cover of Offer of a bandage versus rigid immobilisation in 4- to 15-year-olds with distal radius torus fractures: the FORCE equivalence RCT

Offer of a bandage versus rigid immobilisation in 4- to 15-year-olds with distal radius torus fractures: the FORCE equivalence RCT

Health Technology Assessment, No. 26.33

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , ; ; on behalf of in collaboration with PERUKI.

Author Information and Affiliations

Headline

This study showed equivalence in pain at 3 days between children treated with offer of a bandage and rigid immobilisation for distal radius torus fracture.

Abstract

Background:

Torus (buckle) fractures of the wrist are the most common fractures in children involving the distal radius and/or ulna. It is unclear if children require rigid immobilisation and follow-up or would recover equally as well by being discharged without any immobilisation or a bandage. Given the large number of these injuries, identifying the optimal treatment strategy could have important effects on the child, the number of days of school absence and NHS costs.

Objectives:

To establish whether or not treating children with a distal radius torus fracture with the offer of a soft bandage and immediate discharge (i.e. offer of a bandage) provides the same recovery, in terms of pain, function, complications, acceptability, school absence and resource use, as treatment with rigid immobilisation and follow-up as per usual practice (i.e. rigid immobilisation).

Design:

A pragmatic, multicentre, randomised controlled equivalence trial.

Setting:

Twenty-three UK emergency departments.

Participants:

A total of 965 children (aged 4–15 years) with a distal radius torus fracture were randomised from January 2019 to July 2020 using a secure, centralised, online-encrypted randomisation service. Exclusion criteria included presentation > 36 hours after injury, multiple injuries and an inability to complete follow-up.

Interventions:

A bandage was offered to 489 participants and applied to 458, and rigid immobilisation was carried out in 476 participants. Participants and clinicians were not blinded to the treatment allocation.

Main outcome measures:

The pain at 3 days post randomisation was measured using the Wong–Baker FACES Pain Rating Scale. Secondary outcomes were the patient-reported outcomes measurement system upper extremity limb score for children, health-related quality of life, complications, school absence, analgesia use and resource use collected up to 6 weeks post randomisation.

Results:

A total of 94% of participants provided primary outcome data. At 3 days, the primary outcome of pain was equivalent in both groups. With reference to the prespecified equivalence margin of 1.0, the adjusted difference in the intention-to-treat population was –0.10 (95% confidence interval –0.37 to 0.17) and the per-protocol population was –0.06 (95% confidence interval –0.34 to 0.21). There was equivalence of pain in both age subgroups (i.e. 4–7 years and 8–15 years). There was no difference in the rate of complications, with five complications (1.0%) in the offer of a bandage group and three complications (0.6%) in the rigid immobilisation group. There were no differences between treatment groups in functional recovery, quality of life or school absence at any point during the follow-up. Analgesia use was marginally higher at day 1 in the offer of a bandage group than it was in the rigid immobilisation group (83% vs. 78% of participants), but there was no difference at other time points. The offer of a bandage significantly reduced the cost of treatment and had a high probability of cost-effectiveness at a willingness-to-pay threshold of £30,000 per quality-adjusted life-year.

Limitations:

Families had a strong pre-existing preference for the rigid immobilisation treatment. Given this, and the inability to blind families to the treatment allocation, observer bias was a concern. However, there was clear evidence of equivalence.

Conclusions:

The study findings support the offer of a bandage in children with a distal radius torus fracture.

Future work:

A clinical decision tool to determine which children require radiography is an important next step to prevent overtreatment of minor wrist fractures. There is also a need to rationalise interventions for other common childhood injuries (e.g. ‘toddler’s fractures’ of the tibia).

Trial registration:

This trial is registered as ISRCTN13955395 and UKCRN Portfolio 39678.

Funding:

This project was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme and will be published in full in Health Technology Assessment; Vol. 26, No. 33. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.

Contents

About the Series

Health Technology Assessment
ISSN (Print): 1366-5278
ISSN (Electronic): 2046-4924

Declared competing interests of authors: Daniel C Perry is a National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Clinician Scientist and a member of the Commissioning Board for NIHR Health Technology Assessment (HTA) (2016–present). James M Mason was a member of the NIHR Health Services and Delivery Research Funding Committee (2017–20), the NIHR HTA End-of-Life Care and Add-on Studies (2015–16) and the NIHR HTA Efficient Study Designs – 2 (2015–16). Damian T Roland is the chairperson of Paediatric Emergency Research United Kingdom and Ireland (PERUKI), which was a partner organisation for the study. Shrouk Messahel receives financial support from the NIHR Research Scholar North West Coast and is the secretary of PERUKI. Matthew L Costa is a NIHR Senior Investigator and a member of the NIHR HTA General Committee (2016–21).

Article history

The research reported in this issue of the journal was funded by the HTA programme as project number 17/23/02. The contractual start date was in July 2018. The draft report began editorial review in February 2021 and was accepted for publication in June 2021. The authors have been wholly responsible for all data collection, analysis and interpretation, and for writing up their work. The HTA editors and publisher have tried to ensure the accuracy of the authors’ report and would like to thank the reviewers for their constructive comments on the draft document. However, they do not accept liability for damages or losses arising from material published in this report.

Last reviewed: February 2021; Accepted: June 2021.

For details, see Appendix 1.

Copyright © 2022 Perry et al. This work was produced by Perry et al. under the terms of a commissioning contract issued by the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care. This is an Open Access publication distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 4.0 licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaption in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. For attribution the title, original author(s), the publication source – NIHR Journals Library, and the DOI of the publication must be cited.
Bookshelf ID: NBK582392DOI: 10.3310/BDNS6122

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