Current Clinical Studies

At Orthofix, we are committed to developing new products in all areas of our business, and we do this through Investigational Device Exemption studies (IDEs), as well as post-approval and post-market studies. IDE studies are used to bring new products or existing products with new indications to market. Post-market studies allow us to examine the effectiveness of our products in a real-world setting. In a post-market study, physicians follow their patients for a period time so that the effectiveness of a device or product can be further evaluated by Orthofix.

 

Investigational Device Exemption Studies

M6-C Artificial Cervical Disc Two-Level IDE Pivotal Study

Patients will be concurrently enrolled in the M6-C treatment group and the ACDF control group. Patients should have failed at least six weeks of conservative treatment or demonstrated progressive symptoms despite continued non-operative treatment. For the study, 263 patients will undergo either a two-level cervical artificial disc procedure or an instrumented (ACDF) procedure as per site group assignment. Patients will be evaluated clinically, radiographically, and via the collection of patient-reported outcomes at six weeks, three months, six months, 12 months, and 24 months. The primary endpoint is overall success at 24 months.

IDE Clinical Study
Learn More about the M6-C Artificial Cervical Disc Two-Level IDE Pivotal Study

Rotator Cuff Repair Study

The purpose of this study is to determine if using a pulsed electromagnetic field (PEMF) device — in addition to having the tear repaired surgically — reduces the rate of tendons being torn again and improves patient outcomes.

IDE Study

Post-Market Clinical Studies

A Multi-Center, Open-Label, Prospective Study of CervicalStim Device as Adjunctive Care Following Cervical Fusion

The purpose of this study is to examine fusion rates following cervical fusion surgery in patients wearing the CervicalStim™ device. Device compliance will be correlated with fusion success. Device compliance will also be correlated with fusion success.

Clinical Study

A Multi-Center, Open-Label, Prospective Study of SpinalStim (MOP-SS) as Adjunctive Care Following Lumbar Fusion Surgery

The purpose of this study is to examine fusion rates following lumbar fusion surgery in patients wearing the SpinalStim™ device. Device compliance will also be correlated with fusion success.

Clinical Study

A Prospective, Post-Market, Multi-Center, Open Label, Non-Randomized Clinical Study of the Efficacy of Using the Trinity ELITE Allograft in Lumbar Fusion Surgery

The purpose of this study is to examine fusion rates following lumbar fusion surgery in patients in which the Trinity ELITE® allograft was used in either an interbody cage or the posterolateral gutters.  Fusion will be determined using CT scans and conventional imaging using independent radiographic reviewers.

Clinical Study