| Literature DB >> 30349947 |
Alexander Hoorntje1,2,3, Berbke T van Ginneken4, P Paul F M Kuijer5, Koen L M Koenraadt6, Rutger C I van Geenen6, Gino M M J Kerkhoffs7,8,9, Ronald J van Heerwaarden4,10.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Distal femoral osteotomy (DFO) is a well-accepted procedure for the treatment of femoral deformities and associated symptoms including osteoarthritis, especially in younger and physically active patients in whom knee arthroplasty is undesirable. Still, there is an apparent need for evidence on relevant patient outcomes, including return to sport (RTS) and work (RTW), to further justify the use of knee osteotomy instead of surgical alternatives. Therefore, the purpose of the present study was to investigate the extent and timing of patients' RTS and RTW after DFO.Entities:
Keywords: De-rotation osteotomy; Distal femoral osteotomy (DFO); Lateral opening wedge; Medial closing wedge; Participation; Prognosis; Return to sport; Return to work; Supracondylar osteotomy (SCO)
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30349947 PMCID: PMC6609586 DOI: 10.1007/s00167-018-5206-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc ISSN: 0942-2056 Impact factor: 4.342
Fig. 1Inclusion flowchart
Fig. 2Posteoperative anteroposterior/lateral radiographs of distal femoral osteotomies (DFOs) with projected osteotomy cuts (striped lines). a Right knee after medial closing wedge DFO, b Left knee after lateral closing wedge DFO, c Right knee after de-rotation DFO, d Left knee after anterior closing wedge DFO
Baseline characteristics of total group and of the OA- and non-OA subgroups
| Outcome measure | Total group ( | OA group ( | Non-OA group ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean age at surgery, years (SD) | 41.2 (14.2) | 48.5 (8.7) | 28.1 (12.9) |
| Median follow-up, years (range) | 3.4 (1.4–5.2) | 3.5 (1.4–5.2) | 3.4 (1.5–5.2) |
| Sex, female (%) | 62 (63) | 39 (61) | 23 (66) |
| Mean BMI, kg/m2 (SD) | 27.3 (4.6) | 28.4 (4.1) | 25.2 (4.9) |
| Side, right (%) | 54 (55) | 40 (63) | 14 (40) |
| ASA classification, | |||
| I | 67 (68) | 41 (64) | 26 (74) |
| II | 31 (31) | 22 (35) | 9 (26) |
| III | 1 (1) | 1 (2) | – |
| Type of femoral deformity | |||
| Varus | 25 (25) | 18 (28) | 7 (20) |
| Valgus | 58 (59) | 46 (72) | 12 (34) |
| Rotational | 13 (13) | – | 13 (37) |
| Extending | 3 (3) | – | 3 (9) |
| Revision osteotomy, yes (%) | 4 (4) | 3 (5) | 1 (3) |
| Hardware removal, yes (%) | 65 (66) | 37 (59) | 28 (80) |
| Timing of hardware removal, years (SD) | 1.0 (0.8) | 1.1 (0.8) | 0.9 (0.6) |
ASA American Society of Anaesthesiologists, BMI body mass index, OA osteoarthritis
Operation type and degree of correction
| Operation type | Patients ( | Degree of correction (mean ± SD) |
|---|---|---|
| Medial cwDFO | 42 (43%) | 7.9° ± 2.9° |
| Lateral cwDFO | 14 (14%) | 6.5° ± 2.2° |
| Lateral owDFO | 5 (5%) | 7.0° ± 3.6° |
| Lateral cwDFO + medial owHTO | 9 (9%) | 6.3° ± 2.8° + 6.7° ± 1.6° |
| Medial cwDFO + medial cwTKO | 13 (13%) | 7.9° ± 4.0° + 7.5° ± 2.7° |
| FDOa | 6 (6%) | 18.3° ± 11.8° |
| FDO + TDOa | 7 (7%) | 13.9° ± 3.5° + 16.5° ± 2.3° |
| Extending DFO | 3 (3%) | 8.5° ± 5.7° |
cw closing wedge, DFO distal femoral osteotomy, FDO femoral de-rotation osteotomy, HTO high tibial osteotomy, ow opening wedge, TDO tibial de-rotation osteotomy
aDegrees of rotational correction are presented
Fig. 3Level of sports participation (no participation, recreational or competitive/professional sports participation) of the total group at four timepoints
Fig. 4Timing of return to work for the OA group and the non-OA group
Number of working hours of the total group at three timepoints
| 1 year preoperatively [ | 1 year postoperatively [ | At final follow-up [ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0–8 h/wk | 13 (16) | 12 (16) | 8 (11) |
| 9–16 h/wk | 10 (13) | 12 (16) | 10 (13) |
| 17–24 h/wk | 9 (11) | 11 (14) | 9 (12) |
| 25–32 h/wk | 12 (15) | 13 (17) | 15 (20) |
| 33–40 h/wk | 21 (27) | 16 (21) | 20 (27) |
| > 40 h/wk | 14 (18) | 12 (16) | 13 (17) |
h hours, wk week
Preoperative knee-demanding workload and postoperative changes in workload
| Workload | Pre-symptomatically (%) | Preoperatively (%) | Change in workload | 1 year postoperatively (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Light | 66 | 73 | Lighter | 14 |
| Intermediate | 25 | 24 | Equal | 79 |
| High | 9 | 3 | Higher | 7 |
Fig. 5Reported difficulty with work-related tasks of the total group at three timepoints*