Treatment Trials

Search clinical trials by condition, location and status

Free to JoinExpert SupportLatest Treatments

Filter & Search

Clinical Trial Results

Showing 1-8 of 8 trials for Sacroiliac
Recruiting

Sacroiliac (SI) Joint Transfixing and Fusion: Meaningful Long Term Outcomes With Nevro1

California · Lodi, CA

The goal of this observational study is to learn if Nevro1 Sacroiliac Transfixing and Fusion System can treat sacroiliac joint dysfunction in males or females over 21. The main questions it aims to answer is what percentage of patients have clinically important pain relief with no adverse events, and what proportion of patients have fusion of the sacroiliac joint at 1 year and 2 years.

Recruiting

A Study Assessing the Safety of Cord Blood Product in Sacroiliac Joint Syndrome (SIJ)

Florida · Gainesville, FL

This is a Phase 1 trial. The overall objective is to evaluate the safety and potential efficacy effect of specific type of umbilical cord blood product (CFL001), which, other than specific modifications in manufacturing to render it compatible with current Good Manufacuring Practice (cGMP), is essentially similar to that reported in real-world experience.

Recruiting

Particulate Vs. Non-Particulate Steroid for Sacroiliac Joint Injection

New Mexico · Albuquerque, NM

This study will compare two different corticosteroids (dexamethasone and methylprednisolone) for use in sacroiliac joint injections to treat SI joint pain.

Recruiting

Conventional vs Bipolar SIJ RFA for Treatment of Sacroiliac Joint Pain

Utah · Farmington, UT

Specific Aims The sacroiliac joint complex (SIJC) is a diathrodial, synovial joint and posterior ligamentous network that receives both anterior innervation from the lumbosacral plexus as well as posterior sensory innervation via the posterior sacral network (PSN). The PSN is comprised by the lateral branches S1-S3 posterior rami, with variable contributions from S4 lateral branch, L4 medial branch, and L5 dorsal ramus. Pain signals originating from the SIJC can be interrupted with image-guided percutaneous radiofrequency ablation (RFA) of the PSN, thereby reducing pain and disability in carefully selected patients. A prior systematic review estimated that 32-89% of patients achieve at least 50% pain relief for six months after some type of PSN ablation. Many experts suspect that heterogenous RFA techniques and technology are responsible for the variable success rates seen across published studies. Cadaveric work suggests that targeting the PSN with a large bipolar strip lesions would result in \>95% PSN neural capture compared to a smaller lesion produced by a conventional, monopolar, periforaminal RFA technique which may capture as low as 2.5% of the PSN. Nimbus is a commonly used multi-tined RFA probe whose large bipolar lesion size make it an ideal option for complete PSN neural ablation. Both the Nimbus (N-SIJRFA) and conventional (C-SIJRFA) techniques and technologies are commonly used; however, there are no prospective RCT's comparing them, and the clinical significance remains unknown. Problem: There are no randomized controlled trials comparing novel technologies like N-SIJRFA to C-SIJRFA. Purpose: To compare pain and disability outcomes in patients with confirmed SIJC pain after randomization to either N-SIJRFA or C-SIJRFA. Central Hypothesis: N-SIJRFA will be more effective in improving pain and function compared to patients treated with C-SIJRFA at 3, 6, 12, 18, and 24 months. Specific Aims: 1. Compare the proportion of participants who report ≥50% relief of pain by Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS) after N-SIJRFA versus C-SIJRFA. 2. Compare the proportion of participants who report ≥15-point ODI (Oswestry Disability Index) reduction after N-SIJRFA versus C-SIJRFA. 3. Compare the proportion of participants with clinically significant improvement in the categorical EuroQol 5 Dimensions tool (EQ-5D) defined by ≥0.03, after N-SIJRFA versus C-SIJRFA. 4. Compare the proportions of participants who report being "improved" or "much improved" on the Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC) scale after N-SIJRFA versus C-SIJRFA. 5. Evaluate the differences in success rates for pain improvement, functional improvement and satisfaction in those experiencing ≥ 50%, ≥ 80%, and 100% pain relief after either prognostic PSN blocks or intra-articular (IA) sacroiliac joint (SIJ) injections. 6. Determine the effect of PSN ablation on reducing pain related sleep disturbance as measured by the Pain and Sleep Questionnaire (PSQ-3). 7. Compare procedural time requirements between those treated with N-SIJRFA versus C-SIJRFA. 8. Report adverse effects. 9. Report rates of subsequent interventional healthcare utilization including repeat N-SIJRFA versus C-SIJRFA, SIJ injection, and SIJ fusion.

Recruiting

Treatment for Sacroiliac Joint Pain Using Platelet-rich Plasma (PRP) Versus Steroid/Anesthetic

Utah · Salt Lake City, UT

The purpose of this study is to determine if platelet-rich plasma is superior to steroid/anesthetic for the treatment of sacroiliac joint pain.

Recruiting

Prospective SPINE Registry

Connecticut · Hartford, CT

This study is a prospective, multi-center, open label registry designed to collect real-world data on performance and safety data on RTI's spine products.

Recruiting

Real-World Registry Study on Patient Satisfaction With TransLoc 3D SI Joint Fusion

Florida · Port Charlotte, FL

This is a multi-center, consecutive enrollment registry study to evaluate patient satisfaction post SI Fusion with the TransLoc 3D SI Fusion System.

Recruiting

Post-Market Feasibility Study of the Tenon Medical CATAMARAN™ SI Joint Fusion System

Idaho · Coeur d'Alene, ID

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the outcomes of patients with sacroiliac joint pain treated with the CATAMARAN SI Joint Fusion System.