One-year outcome of subacromial corticosteroid injection compared with manual physical therapy for the management of the unilateral shoulder impingement syndrome: a pragmatic randomized trial
- PMID: 25089860
- DOI: 10.7326/M13-2199
One-year outcome of subacromial corticosteroid injection compared with manual physical therapy for the management of the unilateral shoulder impingement syndrome: a pragmatic randomized trial
Abstract
Background: Corticosteroid injections (CSIs) and physical therapy are used to treat patients with the shoulder impingement syndrome (SIS) but have never been directly compared.
Objective: To compare the effectiveness of 2 common nonsurgical treatments for SIS.
Design: Randomized, single-blind, comparative-effectiveness, parallel-group trial. (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01190891).
Setting: Military hospital-based outpatient clinic in the United States.
Patients: 104 patients aged 18 to 65 years with unilateral SIS between June 2010 and March 2012.
Intervention: Random assignment into 2 groups: 40-mg triamcinolone acetonide subacromial CSI versus 6 sessions of manual physical therapy.
Measurements: The primary outcome was change in Shoulder Pain and Disability Index scores at 1 year. Secondary outcomes included the Global Rating of Change scores, the Numeric Pain Rating Scale scores, and 1-year health care use.
Results: Both groups demonstrated approximately 50% improvement in Shoulder Pain and Disability Index scores maintained through 1 year; however, the mean difference between groups was not significant (1.5% [95% CI, -6.3% to 9.4%]). Both groups showed improvements in Global Rating of Change scale and pain rating scores, but between-group differences in scores for the Global Rating of Change scale (0 [CI, -2 to 1]) and pain rating (0.4 [CI, -0.5 to 1.2]) were not significant. During the 1-year follow-up, patients receiving CSI had more SIS-related visits to their primary care provider (60% vs. 37%) and required additional steroid injections (38% vs. 20%), and 19% needed physical therapy. Transient pain from the CSI was the only adverse event reported.
Limitation: The study occurred at 1 center with patients referred to physical therapy.
Conclusion: Both groups experienced significant improvement. The manual physical therapy group used less 1-year SIS-related health care resources than the CSI group.
Primary funding source: Cardon Rehabilitation Products through the American Academy of Orthopaedic Manual Physical Therapists.
Comment in
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Pragmatic study of corticosteroid injections and manual physical therapy for the shoulder impingement syndrome.Ann Intern Med. 2014 Aug 5;161(3):224-5. doi: 10.7326/M14-1405. Ann Intern Med. 2014. PMID: 25089865 No abstract available.
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[Shoulder impingement syndrome: steroid injections are not superior to manual physical therapy].Praxis (Bern 1994). 2014 Nov 12;103(23):1408-9. doi: 10.1024/1661-8157/a001827. Praxis (Bern 1994). 2014. PMID: 25391748 German. No abstract available.
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Management of the unilateral shoulder impingement syndrome.Ann Intern Med. 2015 Feb 3;162(3):237. doi: 10.7326/L15-5043. Ann Intern Med. 2015. PMID: 25643309 No abstract available.
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Management of the unilateral shoulder impingement syndrome.Ann Intern Med. 2015 Feb 3;162(3):237-8. doi: 10.7326/L15-5043-2. Ann Intern Med. 2015. PMID: 25643310 No abstract available.
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Similar clinical outcomes but more healthcare use in shoulder impingement patients following corticosteroid injection compared with physical therapy.Evid Based Med. 2015 Apr;20(2):67. doi: 10.1136/ebmed-2015-110171. Epub 2015 Mar 5. Evid Based Med. 2015. PMID: 25743169 No abstract available.
Summary for patients in
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Summaries for patients: corticosteroid injections versus manual physical therapy for treatment of the shoulder impingement syndrome.Ann Intern Med. 2014 Aug 5;161(3):I-22. doi: 10.7326/P14-9024. Ann Intern Med. 2014. PMID: 25089869 No abstract available.
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