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Inflammation and fibrosis: CausEs in adhesive CAPsulitis

ICECAP logo

What is a frozen shoulder?

Frozen shoulder is a common joint disease affecting 10% of the working population. The condition causes significant shoulder pain, disability and social isolation and predominantly affects patients between 40-60 years old.

Frozen shoulder is poorly understood and currently there are no effective treatments. During disease, the joint capsule, an envelope surrounding the shoulder joint becomes inflamed and thickened, causing severe stiffness, which significantly impacts day-to-day life. 

Patients typically have symptoms for 2-5 years, yet interestingly the condition is self-limiting: it almost always resolves during this time.  In contrast many other forms of inflammatory joint disease including arthritis never resolve. Therefore, frozen shoulder is a unique condition whereby chronic inflammation and thickening of the shoulder joint capsule spontaneously resolves over time, as shown in the figure below.  

ICECAP diagram Animal models of frozen shoulder do not accurately represent the condition affecting patients. Therefore, access to patient tissue is vital to advance our understanding of disease. We have established an ethically approved national clinical study called ‘ICECAP’ to collect tissue from the joint capsule of patients undergoing shoulder surgery. 

Preliminary findings

Our preliminary findings from studying frozen shoulder patient tissue samples suggest that cells in the shoulder capsule are enriched to resolve inflammation. Read more about it here.

What is the ICECAP study?

Inflammation and fibrosis: CausEs in adhesive CAPsulitis

The ICECAP study is comprised of 3 patient groups. The Frozen Shoulder Group will comprise patients with frozen shoulder undergoing elective surgery for arthroscopic capsular release. We will compare frozen shoulder patient tissues with 2 other groups of patients undergoing shoulder surgery. The Instability Comparator Group will comprise patients with shoulder instability undergoing elective surgery for anterior stabilisation of the shoulder joint. The Fracture Comparator Group will comprise patients with displaced proximal humeral fractures undergoing surgical repair.

We will use these patient tissues to:

  1. Discover the cell types in inflamed joint capsules and construct a ‘cellular atlas’ of frozen shoulder
  2. Identify the biological processes that lead inflammation and fibrosis to ultimately resolve in frozen shoulder
  3. Identify new therapies to ‘kick-start’ resolution of frozen shoulder 

Our findings will help to identify new treatments to accelerate resolution of frozen shoulder, thereby improving the life quality of affected patients.

ICECAP Study Design

Male and female patients aged between 18-80 years of age are eligible for inclusion to the study. We aim to collect tissues from 60 frozen shoulder patients undergoing adhesive capsular release surgery, 30 fracture patients undergoing surgical repair and 30 patients undergoing shoulder instability surgery. Patients with immune mediated disease affecting the joint including Rheumatoid Arthritis cannot be included into this study. 

Meet the team

Kim Wheway - Research Nurse

Kim Wheway 

Research Nurse

Lois Vesty-Edwards

Lois Vesty-Edwards

Research Nurse

Debra Beazley - Clinical Research Nurse (Human Tissue Collection)

Debra Beazley 

Research Nurse

Tissue Collection 

MB BS, FRCS (Eng), MD, FRCS (Tr & Orth) Jonathan Rees - Head of Department - NDORMS

Prof Jonathan Rees

Chief Investigator

PhD BVetMed MRCVS PGCert TLHE FHEA Stephanie Dakin - Associate Professor of Musculoskeletal Sciences

Prof Stephanie Dakin 

 

Principal Investigator

Amar Rangan - Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery

Prof Amar Rangan 

 

Co-Investigator 

 

Dr Lucksy Kottam

Dr Lucksy Kottam

 

Co-Investigator 

 

Christopher Buckley - Kennedy Professor of Translational Rheumatology and Director of Clinical Research

Prof Christopher Buckley 

 

Co-Investigator 

 

Dr Hamez Gacaferi 

 

Clinical Fellow & DPhil student 

 

 

Contact

Funded by

Versus Arthritis logo

Oxford Biomedical Research Centre logo