Completed

REGAINA Randomized Controlled Trial of Regional Versus General Anesthesia for Promoting Independence After Hip Fracture

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What is being tested

Regional Anesthesia

+ General Anesthesia

Procedure
Who is being recruted

Femoral Fractures+3

+ Hip Fractures

+ Leg Injuries

Over 50 Years
+6 Eligibility Criteria
See all eligibility criteria
How is the trial designed

Prevention Study

Interventional
Study Start: February 2016
See protocol details

Summary

Principal SponsorUniversity of Pennsylvania
Last updated: January 28, 2026
Sourced from a government-validated database.Claim as a partner

Study start date: February 1, 2016

Actual date on which the first participant was enrolled.

Hip fracture is a clinical condition that involves a break in the femur (hip bone) near where it attaches to the pelvis. Hip fractures occur more than 300,000 times each year in the US and over 1.6 million times each year worldwide. Over 90% of hip fractures occur in individuals aged 50 or older, most commonly resulting from low-energy traumatic injuries, such as falls from standing in the context of established osteoporosis, chronic illness, or disability. Surgical treatment, via fixation of the fractured bone or partial or total replacement of the hip joint, is indicated for all types of hip fractures and approximately 95% of hip fracture patients undergo surgery. No evidence-based interventions now exist to improve functional outcomes after hip fracture surgery beyond the immediate postoperative period. Nearly all hip fracture patients require orthopedic surgery and anesthesia, making the anesthetic care episode a major opportunity to impact outcomes. Spinal and general anesthesia represent the two standard care approaches to anesthesia for hip fracture surgery. Basic and clinical research has identified multiple plausible mechanisms by which spinal anesthesia may improve outcomes after hip fracture; nonetheless, major guidelines and systematic reviews have identified key evidence gaps and anesthesia care for hip fracture varies markedly in practice. While spinal and general anesthesia for hip fracture have been previously compared in retrospective studies and small randomized trials, much of the available prospective trial data is old and may not be reflective of current clinical practice. REGAIN will be the first pragmatic multicenter prospective randomized trial of spinal versus general anesthesia for hip fracture surgery designed to evaluate the association of anesthesia technique with functional recovery after hip fracture. As such, it will fill critical evidence gaps to inform policy and practice. Approximately 2,424 subjects will be enrolled (i.e. informed consent for participation will be obtained) in order to yield approximately 1,600 randomized patients. This estimate is based on an assumption that one in three patients (33%) who undergo consent prior to surgery will not be randomized on the day of surgery due to active clinical issues, timing of medication dosing, clinical assessments by treating physicians or the site Clinical Director or their designate, or patient withdrawal of consent.

Official TitleA Randomized Controlled Trial of Regional Versus General Anesthesia for Promoting Independence After Hip Fracture
NCT02507505
Principal SponsorUniversity of Pennsylvania
Last updated: January 28, 2026
Sourced from a government-validated database.Claim as a partner

Protocol

This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.
Design Details

1848 patients to be enrolled

Total number of participants that the clinical trial aims to recruit.

Prevention Study

Prevention studies aim to stop a disease from developing. They often involve people at risk and test things like vaccines, lifestyle changes, or preventive medications.


Eligibility

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria: person's general health condition or prior treatments.
Conditions
Criteria

Any sex

Biological sex of participants that are eligible to enroll.

Over 50 Years

Range of ages for which participants are eligible to join.

Healthy volunteers not allowed

If individuals who are healthy and do not have the condition being studied can participate.

Conditions

Pathology

Femoral FracturesHip FracturesLeg InjuriesWounds and InjuriesHip InjuriesFractures, Bone

Criteria

3 inclusion criteria required to participate
Clinically or radiographically diagnosed intracapsular or extracapsular hip fracture

Planned surgical treatment via hemiarthroplasty, total hip arthroplasty or appropriate fixation procedure

Ability to walk 10 feet or across a room without human assistance before fracture

3 exclusion criteria prevent from participating
Periprosthetic fracture

Planned concurrent surgery not amenable to spinal anesthesia

Absolute contraindications to spinal anesthesia

Study Plan

Find out more about all the medication administered in this study, their detailed description and what they involve.
Treatment Groups
Study Objectives

2 intervention groups are designated in this study

This study does not include a placebo group 

Treatment Groups

Group I

Active Comparator
Approximately half of the subjects will be randomized to the arm which receives Regional Anesthesia.

Group II

Active Comparator
Approximately half of the subjects will be randomized to the arm which receives General Anesthesia.

Study Objectives

Primary Objectives

Secondary Objectives

Study Centers

These are the hospitals, clinics, or research facilities where the trial is being conducted. You can find the location closest to you and its status.

This study has 45 locations

Suspended

University of Alabama Birmingham

Birmingham, United StatesOpen University of Alabama Birmingham in Google Maps
Suspended

University of California Davis Medical Center

Sacramento, United States
Suspended

Hartford Hospital

Hartford, United States
Suspended

Yale School of Medicine

New Haven, United States
Completed45 Study Centers