Dupuytren disease (DD) is a common hand disorder with disabling finger contractures that
may require surgery to restore function. The contractures are caused by progressive
fibroproliferative tissue forming nodules and strands in the palmar fascia that
eventually cause loss of finger extension. In the early stages of the disease, the
nodules (Tubiana stage 0) are usually painless, but a reason for concern to many
patients. They often seek the hand surgeon's advice and worry about losing hand function
the coming years, commonly requesting for precautionary measures to stop evolution
towards contractures (Tubiana stage 1-4). Not rarely, lifestyle measures and even risky
treatment options as radiotherapy are advised, yet no therapy to prevent disease
evolution has a solid proven effect. Furthermore, reliable non-invasive measurement of
early stage DD is not validated.
However, this is needed to explore any efficient preventive treatment that may be
cost-efficient for patients and healthcare.
Evidence was found that pharmacotherapy may influence DD evolution, but valuable clinical
trials are limited. Case series and non-published explorative follow-up suggested local
treatment with antioxidant vitamin E to possibly interfere with an evolution of DD
nodules to contracting strands. Therefore, it is recommended to consider local creams to
the palms in such situation.
This study aims to provide evidence on efficiency of this non-invasive treatment option.
Secure measurement of nodule evolution is a clinical challenge. To measure this
evolution, ultrasound and MRI scanning are currently being performed. In clinical
practice, although clinical staging of contractures is reliable, stage 0 (nodules) is
more challenging to quantify. If observed, nodules (evolution) are often measured by
clinical yardstick assessment. However, this technique is unvalidated and unreliable with
inevitable significant inter- and intra-observer unreliability, which may improve with
sonography. A strict individual follow-up by the treating clinician is needed to
standardize measurement of selected (treated) nodules. Therefore, simple ultrasound by
the treating clinician may provide an good tool to collect data. The V-Scan (simple
office-based Bluetooth ultrasonography) may aid to achieve this and its use is
successfully implemented since 1 year at the hand Surgery department at Université
Catholique de Louvain (UCL) by and under supervision of Prof Dr X. Libouton.
This study aims to introduce and validate this non-invasive scan method and provide a
prospective double blind investigation of a measurable effect of non-invasive preventive
treatment for stage 0 DD to improve clinical outcome.
Rationale: Application of antioxidant creme cause V-scan measurable arrest or even
shrinking of the nodules in stage 0 of DD.