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Brachial plexus nerve block versus haematoma block for closed reduction of distal radius fracture in adults: The BLOCK Trial - a protocol for a multicentre randomised controlled trial

  • Cecilie Dupont Harwood
  • , Anne-Sofie Linde Jellestad*
  • , Aurelien-Xuan Rosendal Bahuet
  • , Rasmus Linnebjerg Knudsen
  • , Lana Chafranska Andersen
  • , Ole Mathiesen
  • , Jonas Askø Andersen
  • , Janus Christian Jakobsen
  • , Christian Rothe
  • , Christoffer Calov Jørgensen
  • , Bjarke Viberg
  • , Stig Brorson
  • , Mikkel Brabrand
  • , Per Hviid Gundtoft
  • , Mads Terndrup
  • , Kai Henrik Wiborg Lange
  • , Lars Hyldborg Lundstrøm
  • , Anders Kehlet Nørskov
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalProtocolpeer-review

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Distal radius fractures account for one-fifth of all fractures in the active elderly population and may cause chronic pain, loss of hand function and reduced work productivity, imposing a significant socioeconomic burden. Most are initially treated with closed reduction and casting, but 30% subsequently require surgery due to insufficient realignment. The current approaches for analgesia for closed reduction are suboptimal. A brachial plexus nerve block provides complete pain relief and muscle relaxation distal to the elbow, potentially creating better conditions for realignment of the fractured bone ends. This may ultimately translate into reduced need for surgery and result in better functional outcomes and fewer complications compared to a haematoma block, which is the current standard care in Denmark.

METHODS AND ANALYSIS: The BLOCK Trial is an investigator-initiated, parallel-group, allocation-concealed, outcome assessor and analyst-blinded, superiority, randomised, controlled, clinical multicentre trial performed at 11 Danish emergency departments. Eligible adult patients with a distal radius fracture who need closed reduction will be included and allocated 1:1 to either an ultrasound-guided brachial plexus nerve block or a haematoma block. The primary outcome is the proportion of patients with distal radius fracture surgery 90 days after closed reduction. We will include 1716 participants to detect or discard a relative risk reduction of surgery of 20%. Secondary outcomes include treatment-related complications, patient-reported wrist function, pain during closed reduction and proportion of patients with unacceptable radiographic fracture position immediately after closed reduction.

ETHICS AND DISSEMINATIONF: The trial is approved by the Danish Medicines Agency and the Danish Research Ethics Committees (EU CT number: 2024-512191-35-00). All results will be summarised on www.theblocktrial.com, clinicaltrials.gov and euclinicaltrials.eu after publication. Primary and secondary outcome results from 0 to 90 days will be presented in the main article and submitted to a peer-reviewed journal. Results from outcomes on the 12-month follow-up will be presented separately.

TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT06678438.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere099954
Number of pages9
JournalBMJ open
Volume15
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 8 Jul 2025

Funding

This work is supported by the Sygeforsikringen "danmark", The Independent Research Fund Denmark, the research foundation of The Capital Region of Denmark and Copenhagen University Hospital-North Zealand, Hillered. These funding sources do not affect the design of the trial and will not influence the execution, analyses, interpretation of data or submission of the results.

Funders
Sygeforsikringen "Danmark
Independent Research Fund Denmark
The Capital Region of Denmark
North Zealand Hospital

    Keywords

    • Humans
    • Radius Fractures/surgery
    • Brachial Plexus Block/methods
    • Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
    • Multicenter Studies as Topic
    • Closed Fracture Reduction/methods
    • Hematoma
    • Denmark
    • Adult
    • Ultrasonography, Interventional
    • Nerve Block/methods
    • Wrist Fractures
    • Fractures, Closed
    • Hand & wrist
    • Anaesthesia in orthopaedics

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