| Literature DB >> 28630734 |
Kotaro R Shibata1,2, Shuichi Matsuda3, Marc R Safran4.
Abstract
Hip dysplasia is a developmental disorder that results in anatomic abnormalities in which the acetabular coverage is insufficient. In the absence of severe degenerative changes, younger active patients with these symptomatic structural abnormalities are increasingly managed with joint-preserving operations. Historically there have been numerous reconstructive pelvic osteotomies. In recent years, the Bernese periacetabular osteotomy (PAO) has become the preferred osteotomy by many surgeons. Even so, as our understanding of the hip advances and new diagnostic and treatment techniques are developed, we sought to put a focus on the long-term results of augmental osteotomies and pelvic osteotomies other than the PAO, to see if any of these surgeries still have a place in the current algorithm of treatment for the dysplastic hip. As the longevity of the treatment is the focal point for joint preservation surgeries for the dysplastic hip, these authors have searched databases for articles in the English literature that reported results of long-term follow-up with a minimum of 11-year survivorship after surgical treatment of developmental dysplasia of the hip. Reconstruction osteotomies for the dysplastic hip are intended to restore normal hip anatomy and biomechanics, improve symptoms and prevent degenerative changes, in this manuscript each procedure is independently assessed on the ability to achieve these important characteristics.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 28630734 PMCID: PMC5467430 DOI: 10.1093/jhps/hnv028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hip Preserv Surg ISSN: 2054-8397
Evolution of Pelvic osteotomies
| Type | Surgeon | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Shelf | Köng | 1891 |
| Albee | 1915 | |
| Spitzy | 1923 | |
| Acetabuloplasty | Penberton | 1965 |
| Dega | 1974 | |
| Chiari | Chiari | 1953 |
| Single | Salter | 1961 |
| Double | Sutherland and Greenfield | 1977 |
| Triple | LeCour | 1965 |
| Hopf | 1966 | |
| Steel | 1973 | |
| Triple Juxta-artilular | Tönnis | 1977 |
| Carlioz | 1982 | |
| Spherical | Wagner | 1976 |
| Dial | Eppright | 1975 |
| Rotational | Tagawa and Ninomiya | 1982 |
| Bernese periacetbular | Ganz | 1983 |
Fig. 1.Pelvic osteotomies for hip dysplasia. Red lines indicate site of osteotomy.
Survivorship of the hip after Salter’s single innominate osteotomy
| Authors | Year | Technique | No. of hips | Mean age (year) | Duration of follow-up (year) | Survival rate (%) (THA as endpoint) | Survival rate (%) (poor results as an endpoint) | Follow-up rate (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Böhm and Brzuske [ | 2002 | Salter | 74 | 4.1 (1.3–8.8) | 31 (26–35) | 90 | 79 | 100 |
| Thomas | 2007 | Salter | 101 | 2.8 (1.5–4.7) | 43 (40–48) | 70 | 99 at 30 years, 86 at 40 years, 54 at 45 years | 79 |
Assessing the characteristics of the osteotomies
Survivorship of the hip after Triple innominate osteotomy
| Authors | Year | Technique | No. of hips | Mean age (year) | Duration of follow-up (year) | Survival rate (%) (THA as endpoint) | Survival rate (%) (poor results as an endpoint) | Follow-up rate (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guille | 1992 | Triple | 11 | 14 (11–16) | 12 (10–16) | 91 | 91 | 100 |
| Dungl | 2007 | Triple (Steel) | 351 | 16.5 (9–41) | 12.5 (4–25) | 95 | 94 | 91 |
| Janssen | 2009 | Triple (Tönnis) | 35 | 38.6 (23.9–57) | 11.5 (11–12.2) | 85.3 | 78 | 100 |
| van Stralen | 2013 | Triple (Tönnis) | 48 | 28 (14–48) | 25 (23–29) | 67 | 83 at 10 years, 81 at 15 years, 65 at 25 years | 96 |
Survivorship of the hip after Spherical periacetabular osteotomies
| Authors | Year | Technique | No. of hips | Mean age (year) | Duration of follow-up (year) | Survival rate (%) (THA as endpoint) | Survival rate (%) (poor results as an endpoint) | Follow-up rate (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Schramm | 2003 | Spherical, Wagner | 22 | 24.4 | 23.9 (22–29.3) | 76 | 86 at 20 years, 76 at 24, 65 at 25 years | 88 |
| Miller | 2005 | Dial | 44 | 18.9 (8–31) | 12.6 (5.6–20.2) | 87 | 73 | N/A |
| Nakamura | 1998 | RAO | 145 | 28 (11–52) | 13 (10–23) | 95 | 68 | 63 |
| Nozawa | 2002 | RAO | 50 | 31.8 (13–53) | 11.4 (10–14.5) | 98 | 80 | 90 |
| Yasunaga | 2004 | RAO | 61 | 35 (13–58) | 10.5 (8–14.5) | 100 | 90 | 95 |
| Okano | 2008 | RAO | 49 | 33 (13–54) | 13 (10–17) | 100 | 81 | 82 |
| Hasegawa | 2014 | ERAO | 130 | 27 (15–59) | 19.7(15-23) | 87 | 78 | 98 |
| Ito | 2011 | RAO | 117 | Young 27 (12–39) | 11 (5–20) | 97 | 87 | 95 |
| 41 | Old 47 (40–56) | 11 (5–19) | 93 | 73 | 95 |
Fig. 2.Shelf operation.
Survivorship of the hip after Shelf osteotomy
| Authors | Year | Technique | No. of hips | Mean age (year) | Duration of follow-up (year) | Survival rate (%) (THA as endpoint) | Survival rate (%) (poor results as an endpoint) | Follow-up rate (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| White | 1980 | Shelf | 29 | 7 | 22 (10–31) | 43 | 57 at 25 years | N/A |
| Fawzy | 2005 | Shelf | 76 | 33 (17–60) | 11 (6–14) | 46 | 86 at 5 years, 46 at 10 years | 100 |
| Miguad | 2004 | Shelf | 56 | 32 (17–56) | 15 (15–30) | 58 | 37 at 20 years, | 93 |
| Bickel and Breivis [ | 1975 | Shelf | 141 | N/A | 12.8 (1–32) | 94 | 78 | 84 |
| Saito | 1986 | Shelf | 27 | 25 (11–55) | 12 (5–19) | 92 | 93 | 77 |
| Summers | 1988 | Shelf | 35 | 14 (3–41) | 16 (8–30) | 92 | 67 | 77 |
| Love | 1980 | Shelf | 45 | 12 (6–22) | 11 (2–20) | 88 | 84 | 80 |
| Nishimatsu | 2002 | Shelf | 106 | 25 | 23.8 (15–41) | 89 | 70 | 64 |
| Hirose | 2011 | Shelf | 28 | 34 (17–54) | 25 (20–32) | 80 | 78 at 10 years, 53 at 15 years | 49 |
| Bartonicek | 2012 | Shelf | 25 | 31 (16–52) | 15 (10–23) | 80 | 80 | 100 |
Survivorship of the hip after Chiari osteotomy
| Authors | Year | Technique | No. of hips | Mean age (year) | Duration of follow-up (year) | Survival rate (%) (THA as endpoint) | Survival rate (%) (poor results as an endpoint) | Follow-up rate (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calvert | 1987 | Chiari | 52 | 19.8 (3–41) | 14 (10–19) | 94 | 65 | 72 |
| Windgager | 1991 | Chiari | 236 | 14.1 (2.6–51.3) | 25 (20–34) | 91 | 82 | 60 |
| Lack | 1991 | Chiari | 100 | 38 (30–59) | 16 (10–21) | 80 | 64 | 70 |
| Ohashi | 2000 | Chiari | 103 | 18.2 (6–48) | 17 (4–37) | 94 | 84 at 10 years, 68 at 20 years | 81 |
| Miguad | 2004 | Chiari | 89 | 33 (17–56) | 18 (6–25) | 68 | 78 at 13 years | 93 |
| Yanagimoto | 2005 | Chiari | 74 | 32 (6–64) | 13 (10–20) | 97 | 90 | 69 |
| Kotz | 2009 | Chiari | 80 | 23 (2–50) | 32 (27–48) | 60 | N/A | 15 |
Survivorship of the hip after Bernese PAO
| Authors | Year | Technique | No. of hips | Mean age (year) | Duration of follow-up (year) | Survival rate (%) (THA as endpoint) | Survival rate (%) (poor results as an endpoint) | Follow-up rate (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kralj | 2005 | Bernese | 26 | 34 (17–50) | 12 (7–15) | 85 | 54 | 64 |
| Siebenrock | 1999 | Bernese | 75 | 29.3 (13–56) | 11.3 (10–14) | 82 | 73 were good or excellent | 95 |
| Steppacher | 2008 | Bernese | 75 | 29.3 (13–56) | 20.4 (19–23) | 60 | 57 at 20 years | 93 |
Fig. 3.Indications for type of surgery.