| Literature DB >> 21181226 |
Emilio Romanini1, Franca D'Angelo, Salvatore De Masi, Ezio Adriani, Massimiliano Magaletti, Eleonora Lacorte, Paola Laricchiuta, Luciano Sagliocca, Cristina Morciano, Alfonso Mele.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) surgical reconstruction is performed with the use of an autogenic, allogenic or synthetic graft. The document issued by the Italian National Guidelines System (SNLG, Sistema Nazionale Linee Guida) at the National Institute of Health aims to guide orthopaedic surgeons in selecting the optimal graft for ACL reconstruction using an evidence-based approach.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21181226 PMCID: PMC3014473 DOI: 10.1007/s10195-010-0124-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Traumatol ISSN: 1590-9921
Fig. 1Search strategy and inclusion criteria
Key questions, selected studies and recommendations on use of autograft in arthroscopic ACL reconstruction
| Key questions | Studies | Recommendations |
|---|---|---|
| Is use of autograft effective in patients with anterior cruciate ligament injury (with or without meniscal lesions and/or grade I/II focal chondral lesions) and a shared indication to arthroscopic reconstruction? | 407 identified, 26 selected, 19 rated, 19 included |
Evidence is currently not sufficient to absolutely recommend use of one of the treated autograft techniques. Higher stability subsequent to use of patellar tendon is proven, while use of hamstring is suggested in patients needing, for various reasons, to stay on their knees for long periods of time, and who therefore need a substantial reduction of intensity and length of pain |
| Is use of autograft safe in patients with anterior cruciate ligament injury (with or without meniscal lesions and/or grade I/II focal chondral lesions) and a shared indication to arthroscopic reconstruction? | 48 identified, 5 selected, 5 rated, 5 included |
The methodological quality of the studies investigating the different autograft techniques is not very high. Randomized studies are therefore needed, with good statistical power, adequate blinding procedures in the choice of outcomes and a standardized definition of interventions and outcomes Qualitative studies are also needed, aimed at investigating patients’ (and clinicians’) preferences in relation to the relevance of the considered outcomes Further studies are finally recommended, aimed at testing the effectiveness of autograft with hamstring associated to extra-articular surgery to contain laxity |
Key questions, selected studies and recommendations on use of allograft in arthroscopic anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction
| Key questions | Studies | Recommendations |
|---|---|---|
| Is use of allograft effective in patients with anterior cruciate ligament injury (with or without meniscal lesions and/or grade I/II focal chondral lesions) and a shared indication to arthroscopic reconstruction? | 407 identified, 3 selected, 2 rated, 2 included |
Use of autograft is recommended in anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. Use of allograft shows, in fact, higher failure rate and slightly increased risk of infective complications |
| Is use of allograft safe in patients with anterior cruciate ligament injury (with or without meniscal lesions and/or grade I/II focal chondral lesions) and a shared indication to arthroscopic reconstruction? | 48 identified, 3 selected, 2 rated, 2 included |
Randomized studies are recommended, comparing the best techniques concerning the two types of graft (autograft and allograft) and providing information on the contextual (organizational, structural, cultural) determinants of effectiveness for each intervention |
Key questions, selected studies and recommendations on use of synthetic grafts in arthroscopic anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction
| Key questions | Studies | Recommendations |
|---|---|---|
| Is use of synthetic grafts effective in patients with anterior cruciate ligament injury (with or without meniscal lesions and/or grade I/II focal chondral lesions) and a shared indication to arthroscopic reconstruction? | 235 identified, 3 selected, 2 rated, 2 included |
Lack of evidence does not allow recommendation of use of synthetic graft for anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. The little available evidence suggests possible future development of use of such materials, but further studies are needed to assess their effectiveness |
| Is use of synthetic grafts safe in patients with anterior cruciate ligament injury (with or without meniscal lesions and/or grade I/II focal chondral lesions) and a shared indication to arthroscopic reconstruction? | 48 identified, 0 selected, 0 rated, 0 included |
Randomized studies are recommended, aimed at comparing use of synthetic grafts and the best available techniques of autograft and allograft for anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction Studies aimed at identifying synthetic materials and the most appropriate methodologies for their use are also recommended |
Comparison of allograft versus autograft
| Outcome | Relevancea | Effectiveness rate | Quality of evidenceb | Risk–benefit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Return to pre-injury activity | 8.3-Critical | OR 1.2 (0.7–2.0) | + | Slight increase of infective complications in allograft |
| Graft rupture | 8-Critical | OR 5.0 (1.4–18.3) | ++ | |
| IKDC score | 7.7-Critical | OR 1.5 (0.2–10.4) | − | The sterilization procedures risk affecting the effectiveness of allograft |
| Lachman test | 5.8-Important | OR 2.7 (0.7–10.8) | + | |
| Pivot shift test | 5.8-Important | OR 1.2 (0.5–3.0) | + | |
| Hop test | 5-Important | OR 5.7 (3.1–10.4) | + |
GRADE method
a 1–3 = unimportant; 4–6 = important; 7–9 = critical
b High = ++++; moderate = +++; low = ++; very low = +