| Literature DB >> 30109504 |
P van Gerven1, S M Rubinstein2, C Nederpelt3, M F Termaat3, P Krijnen3, M W van Tulder2, I B Schipper3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The added value of routine radiography in the follow-up of extremity fractures is unclear. The aim of this systematic review was to create an overview of radiography use in extremity fracture care and the consequences of these radiographs for the treatment of patients with these fractures.Entities:
Keywords: Added value; Extremity; Fractures; Radiography; Routine; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30109504 PMCID: PMC6224023 DOI: 10.1007/s00402-018-3021-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Orthop Trauma Surg ISSN: 0936-8051 Impact factor: 3.067
Fig. 1Flowchart of the article selection process
Study characteristics
| Author | Years | Country | Fracture location and type | No. of participants | Inclusion/exclusion | Length of follow-up mean (range) | Compared groups | Age mean (range) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| de Beaux | 1992 | Scotland | Elbow joint | 31 | Incl: patients without a fracture, but with a positive fat pad sign on ED radiographs Excl: no FU radiographs, no-show on 2w visit | 2 weeks | – | 52 (17–94) |
| Eastley | 2012 | UK | Conservatively treated, extra-articular, distal radius fracture | 138 | Incl: hand therapy, grip strength + ROM. Excl age < 16. Goyrand–Smith fracture, open fracture. NV symptoms, other ER, no initial or follow-up radiographs, instability/pain at follow-up | Until discharge from physiotherapy | Short (1st | Short: 63 (17–91) Long: 62 (17–93) |
| Ghattas | 2013 | USA | All: pelvis, acetabulum, tibia, ankle, clavicle, elbow, hip, wrist, foot, knee, femur, forearm, humerus, scapula | 171 (200 fractures) | Incl: acute fracture age < 18, time to surgery > 2 weeks, surgical fixation with implants, radiograph at 1st post-op visit. Excl: spine and skull fractures | 24 days (7–61) | – | 58 (18–99) |
| Huffaker | 2014 | USA | Distal radius fracture, AO type A | 158 (446 radiographs) | Incl: patients with volar locking plate surgery, Excl: open fracture, both bone forearm#, skeletal immature, severely injured patients (ISS > 16) | 4.2 months (1.5–48) | – | 53.2 |
| Kempegowda | 2016 | USA | Healed intertrochanteric fracture | 465 | Incl: clinical and radiological consolidation, FU > 1Y Excl: age < 60, pathological fracture, periprosthetic fracture, sec. dislocation, non-union | 81.2 weeks (52–368) | – | 77 (60–98) |
| McDonald | 2014 | USA | Operatively treated ankle fracture | 1411 | Incl :surgical fixation Excl: open fracture, incomplete charts, no radiography between T + 7 and T + 120 days | Until discharge from clinic | Early ( | Early 36 (21–52) Late 40 (25–55) |
| Ovaska | 2016 | Finland | Operatively treated ankle fracture | 878 | Incl: age 16 + ORIF of the fracture | 64 months | – | 48 (16–91) |
| Robertson | 2000 | Scotland | Isolated, closed tibial shaft fracture | 53 (343 radiographs) | Incl: treated with intramedullary nailing | No statement. time to union: 24 weeks (10–73) | – | 31 (14–86) |
| Schuld | 2016 | USA | Non-displaced fracture of hand, wrist, ankle or foot | 265 (27 post-splinting X, 179 repeat X at FU) | Incl: non-dislocated fracture, plaster immobilization. Excl: brace immobilization | 9 days (1–135) | – | 34 (1–91) |
| Stone | 2015 | USA | Operatively treated distal radius fracture | 261 (268 fractures) | Excl: skeletal immaturity, absent 2-week radiograph, less than 3 sets of radiographs | 12 weeks | – | 29 (14–90) |
| Weil | 2017 | NL | Both operatively and conservatively treated distal radius fractures | 1042 | Incl: age > 18 Excl: absence of FU data, pathologic fracture, open fracture, >1 simultaneous fracture of the extremities | No statement | – | 58,5 (SD:19.6) |
Characteristics of the studies included in the systematic review
UK United Kingdom, USA United States of America, NL Netherlands, AO Arbeitsgemeinschaft für Osteosynthesefragen1, ROM range of motion, FU follow-up, ISS injury severity score, ER emergency room, ORIF open reduction, internal fixation, SD standard deviation, T + x x days following trauma or operative fixation, X radiograph
1. AO foundation. Available from: http://www.aofoundation.org
Study outcomes
| Author | Relevant measured outcome(s) | Changes in management | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| de Beaux | Change in treatment strategy | 0/31 (0%) | 6% fractures observed (2 patients), no changes treatment strategy |
| Eastley | Grip strength, ROM, conversion to operative care | 0/61 (0%) | Grip strength/ROM: no difference. no conversion to operative care based on late radiographs |
| Ghattas | No. of radiographs per patient, changes from normal post-operative management | 3/200 (1.5%) | 3/200 changes from normal post-operative management |
| Huffaker | % Clinical findings (changes from expected normal follow-up), % radiographic findings(hardware or fracture complications), re-intervention, complications | – | 0% radiographic complications |
| Kempegowda | Changes on radiographs obtained after radiological healing had been established. no. of radiographs and clinic visits, complications, costs | – | No. of clinic visits: 2.8, no. of Radiographs: 2.6. 98% no changes, 0.7% AVN 0.7% osteoarthritis 0.7% heterotopic ossification |
| McDonald | Complications | – | Complications: early: 62/889 (7.0%) late 31/522(5.9%) |
| Ovaska | Change in treatment strategy | 3/878 (0.3%) | 3/878 changes in treatment strategy based merely on radiographs (0.3%) |
| Robertson | Change in treatment strategy | 9/343 (2,6%) | 9/343 (2,6%) of follow-up radiographs --> change in treatment strategy |
| Schuld | Dislocation on post-splinting radiographs. secondary displacement on repeat radiographs, change in treatment strategy | 0/27 (0%) | No change in treatment strategy based on post-splinting radiographs. 7.8% sec. dislocation. No change in treatment strategy based on repeat radiographs |
| Stone | change from normal post-operative management, unplanned re-intervention | 3/261 (1.1%) | 1% unexpected changes in post-operative management (3 Patients) (secondary dislocation/hardware failure) --> re-intervention (all after new trauma) |
| Weil | Change in treatment strategy | 11/720 (1.5%) | Change in treatment strategy: 22/841 radiographs (2.6%). Changes based on routine radiographs: 11/720 (1.5%). 9/11 (1.2%) prolonged cast immobilization, 2/11 (0.2%) conversion to surgery |
Measured outcomes and results of included studies
ROM range of motion
Methodological quality
| Author | Selection (max 4 ★) | Comparability (max 2★) | Outcome (max 3★) |
|---|---|---|---|
| De Beaux | ★★ | – | ★★ |
| Eastley | ★★★ | – | ★★ |
| Ghattas | ★★ | – | ★★ |
| Huffaker | ★★ | – | ★★★ |
| Kempegowda | ★★ | – | ★★★ |
| McDonald | ★★★ | – | ★★★ |
| Ovaska | ★★ | – | ★★★ |
| Robertson | ★ | – | ★★ |
| Schuld | ★★★ | – | ★★ |
| Stone | ★★ | – | ★★★ |
| Weil | ★★ | – | ★★★ |
Scores per category on the Newcastle–Ottawa scale