| Literature DB >> 27995286 |
Neel Desai1,2, Daniel Andernord3,4,5, David Sundemo6,3, Eduard Alentorn-Geli7, Volker Musahl8, Freddie Fu8, Magnus Forssblad9, Kristian Samuelsson6,3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To investigate the association between surgical variables and the risk of revision surgery after ACL reconstruction in the Swedish National Knee Ligament Register.Entities:
Keywords: Anatomic; Anterior cruciate ligament; Drilling; Reconstruction; Register; Revision
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27995286 PMCID: PMC5432593 DOI: 10.1007/s00167-016-4399-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc ISSN: 0942-2056 Impact factor: 4.342
Fig. 1Flow diagram of inclusion and exclusion criteria
Answer requirements characterizing defined groups
| Use of an acc. medial portal | Visualization of the femoral ACL insertion site | Visualization of the tibial ACL insertion site | Lateral intercondylar ridge identified | Bifurcate ridge identified | Placing the femoral tunnel(s) in the femoral ACL insertion site | Placing the tibial tunnel(s) in the tibial ACL insertion site | Transportal drilling of the femoral ACL tunnel(s) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group | ||||||||
| TP-reference | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| TP-anatomic | Yes | Yes | Yes | |||||
| TT-anatomic | Yes | Yes | No | |||||
| TT-partial anatomic | No | Yes | No | |||||
| TT-non-anatomic | No | No | No | |||||
| All landmarks | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | ||||
| No landmarks | No | No | No | No | ||||
| TP drilling | Yes | |||||||
| TT-drilling | No | |||||||
Empty spaces are not assigned a mandatory answer requirement. Surgeons can thus answer “Yes” or “No” to these items
Acc accessory, TP transportal, TT transtibial
Fig. 2Flow diagram of questionnaire distribution
Fig. 3Current national frequency of use of surgical variable amongst questionnaire respondents
Fig. 4Mean AARSC score based on respondents questionnaire answers
Description of baseline cohort
| Cohort ( | ||
|---|---|---|
| % |
| |
| Patient sex | ||
| Male | 56.6 | 10,013 |
| Female | 43.4 | 7669 |
| Age at index ACL reconstruction | ||
| 13–15 years | 7.4 | 1300 |
| 16–20 years | 28.7 | 5075 |
| 21–25 years | 20.7 | 3667 |
| 26–30 years | 14.2 | 2513 |
| 31–35 years | 10.0 | 1777 |
| 36–49 years | 18.9 | 3350 |
| Concomitant MCL injury at index surgery | ||
| Yes | 2.4 | 425 |
| No | 97.6 | 17,257 |
| Concomitant LCL injury at index surgery | ||
| Yes | 0.6 | 100 |
| No | 99.4 | 17,582 |
| Meniscus injury present (medial and/or lateral) at index surgery | ||
| Yes | 43.8 | 7743 |
| No | 56.2 | 9939 |
| Cartilage injury present at index surgery | ||
| Yes | 26.0 | 4598 |
| No | 74.0 | 13,084 |
| Meniscus and/or cartilage injury at index surgery | ||
| Yes | 54.8 | 9685 |
| No | 45.2 | 7997 |
ACL anterior cruciate ligament, LCL lateral collateral ligament, MCL medial collateral ligament
Patient sex, age and concomitant injury and risk of revision ACL surgery
| Revision cohort ( | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % |
| Hazard rate | 95% CI |
| |
| Patient sex | |||||
| Malea | 53.6 | 296 | 1.128 | 0.954–1.333 | n.s. |
| Female | 46.4 | 256 | |||
| Age at index ACL reconstruction | |||||
| 13–15 years | 13.4 | 74 | 5.259 | 3.532–7.833 | <0.001 |
| 16–20 years | 45.7 | 252 | 4.675 | 3.297–6.628 | <0.001 |
| 21–25 years | 21.2 | 117 | 3.131 | 2.155–4.548 | <0.001 |
| 26–30 years | 7.8 | 43 | 1.590 | 1.021–2.476 | 0.040 |
| 31–35 years | 5.4 | 30 | 1.527 | 0.941–2.479 | n.s. |
| 36–49 yearsa | 6.5 | 36 | |||
| Meniscus injury present (medial and/or lateral) at index surgery | |||||
| Yes | 43.1 | 238 | 0.994 | 0.840–1.176 | n.s. |
| Noa | 56.9 | 314 | |||
| Cartilage injury present at index surgery | |||||
| Yes | 21.2 | 117 | 0.720 | 0.587–0.883 | 0.002 |
| Noa | 78.8 | 435 | |||
ACL anterior cruciate ligament, CI confidence interval
aReference group
Fig. 5Kaplan–Meier survival function of patient sex and revision ACL surgery
Fig. 6Kaplan–Meier survival function of age at index surgery and revision ACL surgery
Fig. 7Kaplan–Meier survival function of meniscus injury and revision ACL surgery
Fig. 8Kaplan–Meier survival function of cartilage injury and revision ACL surgery
Fig. 9Kaplan–Meier survival function of surgical group and revision ACL surgery
Surgical technique and risk of revision ACL surgery
| HR | ADJUSTED HRa | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group | HR | 95% CI |
| HR | 95% CI |
| |||
| Comparison group | No. of eventsb | Reference group | No. of eventsb | ||||||
| TT-non-anatomic ( |
| TP-reference ( |
| 0.704 | 0.497–0.998 | 0.049 | 0.694 | 0.490–0.984 | 0.041 |
| TT-anatomic ( |
| 0.942 | 0.717–1.239 | n.s. | 0.944 | 0.718–1.241 | n.s. | ||
| TT-partial anatomic ( |
| 0.723 | 0.522–1.001 | n.s. | 0.759 | 0.548–1.051 | n.s. | ||
| TP-anatomic ( |
| 1.285 | 1.027–1.607 | 0.028 | 1.310 | 1.047–1.640 | 0.018 | ||
| All landmarks ( |
| No landmarks ( |
| 1.387 | 0.928–2.072 | n.s. | 1.392 | 0.931–2.081 | n.s. |
| TP drilling ( |
| TT-drilling ( |
| 1.390 | 1.157–1.670 | <0.001 | 1.399 | 1.163–1.682 | <0.001 |
CI confidence interval, HR hazard ratio, TP transportal, TT transtibial
aMultivariate Cox regression analysis adjusted for patient sex, patient age and meniscal or chondral injury
bEvent = revision ACL surgery
Fig. 10Kaplan–Meier survival function of femoral drilling technique and revision ACL surgery