Clinical Decision-Making in FAIS
Summary
NIH registered clinical trial NCT07536295 studying dynamic assessment methods for femoroacetabular impingement syndrome (FAIS) surgery decisions. The study aims to develop and validate clinic-ready dynamic assessment methods integrating weight-bearing pelvic alignment with 3D hip modeling to support more objective treatment timing.
What changed
NIH registered a new clinical trial (NCT07536295) focused on developing dynamic assessment methods for femoroacetabular impingement syndrome (FAIS) surgery decisions. The study will use functional lateral x-ray scans, MRI, and markerless 3D motion capture to integrate weight-bearing pelvic and spinal alignment with 3D hip modeling.
For orthopedic surgeons, healthcare providers, and clinical researchers, this study addresses a gap in FAIS treatment decision-making by aiming to create feasible, clinic-ready dynamic assessment tools. The research targets improved timing of surgical intervention, as evidence suggests shorter symptom duration before surgery correlates with better long-term outcomes.
Archived snapshot
Apr 18, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Clinical Decision-Making in FAIS
N/A NCT07536295 Kind: NA Apr 17, 2026
Abstract
Femoroacetabular impingement syndrome is increasingly recognized as a contributor to cartilage injury and early hip osteoarthritis. Both structured conservative care and arthroscopic surgery can improve pain and function, but a major unresolved clinical problem is deciding who should continue conservative care and who should escalate to surgery, and when. Evidence indicates that shorter symptom duration before surgery is associated with better long-term improvement, meaning delays may reduce the chance of achieving meaningful recovery. Current decision-making still depends largely on static imaging and passive clinical examination, which do not capture the dynamic, movement-related nature of the condition, while advanced three-dimensional imaging and laboratory motion analysis are not practical for routine clinical monitoring. This study aims to address this gap by developing and validating feasible, clinic-ready dynamic assessment methods and integrating weight-bearing pelvic and spinal alignment with three-dimensional hip modeling to support more objective, individualized, and timely treatment decisions.
Conditions: Femoracetabular Impingement
Interventions: Functional lateral x-ray scans, Multi-echo Fast Field Echo (mFFE) MRI, Markerless 3D motion capture, Marker-based 3D motion capture (optional)
Related changes
Get daily alerts for ClinicalTrials.gov Studies
Daily digest delivered to your inbox.
Free. Unsubscribe anytime.
Source
About this page
Every important government, regulator, and court update from around the world. One place. Real-time. Free. Our mission
Source document text, dates, docket IDs, and authority are extracted directly from NIH.
The summary, classification, recommended actions, deadlines, and penalty information are AI-generated from the original text and may contain errors. Always verify against the source document.
Classification
Who this affects
Taxonomy
Browse Categories
Get alerts for this source
We'll email you when ClinicalTrials.gov Studies publishes new changes.
Subscribed!
Optional. Filters your digest to exactly the updates that matter to you.