| Literature DB >> 30393555 |
Søren Reinhold Jakobsen1, Inger Mechlenburg1,2, Kjeld Søballe1, Stig Storgaard Jakobsen1.
Abstract
Periacetabular osteotomy (PAO) corrects underlying anatomical anomalies, reduces pain and may postpone or even prevent osteoarthritis onset in patients with symptomatic acetabular dysplasia. Current evidence is based on immediate post-operative pain levels, but knowledge on pain levels in the period after PAO is scarce, and the association between pain score and acetabular angles at PAO is unknown. This study had two aims. First, we studied pain level and patient-reported outcome scores pre- and postoperatively; second, we analysed the association between acetabular angles and pain level. From our database, 426 patients operated from June 2012 to November 2015 were analysed; 127 were excluded. Patients were invited to complete standardized questionnaires preoperatively and postoperatively at 6 and 24 months. Pain was measured using visual analogue scale (VAS). Multiple regression analysis was used to investigate the association between change in centre edge (CE) and acetabular index (AI) angle and pre/postoperative pain levels. Mean (standard deviation, SD) VAS pain at rest before surgery and at the 6- and 24-month follow-up were 35 (24), 14 (20) and 14 (19), respectively. Mean (SD) VAS pain at activity were 69 (22), 41 (29) and 41 (30), respectively. Both VAS pain at rest and at activity fell from the preoperative level to 6 months post-surgery with no further change at 24 months. Patients reported significant improvement in outcomes after 6 months and no further change at the 24-month follow-up. There was no significant association between change in CE/AI angles and VAS pain, either during rest or activity.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30393555 PMCID: PMC6206701 DOI: 10.1093/jhps/hny031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hip Preserv Surg ISSN: 2054-8397
Fig. 1.Flow diagram of inclusion/exclusion criteria.
Demographic and radiographic data at pre- and postoperative levels
| Parameter | Preoperative value | Postoperative value |
|---|---|---|
| Demographic data ( | ||
| Male | 38 (12) | – |
| Female | 261 (88) | – |
| Age | 31.9 (9.2) | – |
| Age at operation | 29.6 (9.2) | – |
| Follow-up time | 2.3 (1.0) | – |
| BMI | 22.9 (20.8–24.8) | – |
| Bilateral operation | 74 (24) | – |
| Educational level (ISCED97) | 4 (2–5) | – |
| Radiographic data ( | ||
| CE angle | 18.6 (6.2) | 29.7 (5.8) |
| AI angle | 12.9 (5.6) | 2.5 (5.8) |
| Change in AI angle | – | 10.4 (5.4) |
| Change in CE angle | – | 11.5 (5.9) |
| Ischial spine sign | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Posterior wall sign | 21 (14) | 20 (14) |
| Positive crossover sign | 8 (5) | 5 (3) |
| Tönnis degree of osteoarthritis | 0 (0–0) | 0 (0–0) |
Note:
, number (%);
, mean (SD),
, median (interquartile ranges).
Mean pain level at rest preoperatively and at 6 and 24 months in groups CE ≥ 20, CE < 20 and combined
| Pain level in groups at different time points: | VAS at rest | VAS during activity | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean pain (SD) | Min, Max | Mean pain (SD) | Min, Max | |||
| CE ≥ 20: | ||||||
| Preoperative | 34.92 (25.13) | 64 | 0; 94 | 70.72 (21.90) | 64 | 14; 100 |
| 6 months | 14.58 (19.20) | 62 | 0; 87 | 40.97 (27.60) | 62 | 2; 97 |
| 24 months | 14.67 (18.94) | 61 | 0; 93 | 40.05 (29.25) | 61 | 0: 100 |
| CE < 20: | ||||||
| Preoperative | 35.55 (23.11) | 82 | 0; 94 | 68.83 (22.49) | 82 | 6; 100 |
| 6 months | 13.38 (19.12) | 79 | 0; 84 | 40.67 (30.07) | 79 | 0; 100 |
| 24 months | 13.44 (19.12) | 78 | 0; 85 | 41.10 (29.24) | 78 | 0; 100 |
| Combined: | ||||||
| Preoperative | 35.27 (23.94) | 146 | 0; 94 | 69.66 (22.17) | 146 | 6; 100 |
| 6 months | 13.90 (19.03) | 141 | 0; 87 | 40.80 (28.91) | 141 | 0; 100 |
| 24 months | 13.97 (19.02) | 139 | 0; 93 | 40.64 (29.48) | 139 | 0; 100 |
Outcome measure preoperatively and at 6 and 24 months of follow-up
| Parameter | Preoperative | 6-month follow-up | 24-month follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|
| ( | ( | ( | |
| Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | |
| Symptom | 53 (20.2) | 73 (19.2) | 73 (19.8) |
| Pain | 55 (18.6) | 79 (17.0) | 79 (17.3) |
| ADL | 65 (19.9) | 85 (15.5) | 86 (15.5) |
| SportRec | 44 (24.1) | 69 (23.3) | 71 (23.4) |
| QOL | 34 (16.4) | 58 (22.8) | 59 (22.4) |
| EQ-5D index | 0.75 (0.06) | 0.82 (0.10) | 0.84 (0.10) |
| PF | 60 (19.8) | 76 (19.2) | 78 (17.9) |
| RP | 32(35.2) | 59 (40.3) | 66 (40.6) |
| BP | 40 (19.8) | 64 (24.5) | 66 (22.6) |
| GH | 66 (20.7) | 74 (21.0) | 73 (20.2) |
| VT | 49 (22.4) | 64 (22.1) | 65 (22.3) |
| SF | 78 (25.0) | 88 (20.1) | 90 (16.2) |
| RE | 66 (40.6) | 83 (33.3) | 87 (28.6) |
| MH | 70 (18.8) | 80 (16.5) | 81 (16.1) |
| Physical component | 36 (8.7) | 44 (9.6) | 45 (9.9) |
| Mental component | 50 (11.5) | 55 (9.0) | 55 (8.3) |
Note:
Paired t-test: significant difference between preoperative and both 6- and 24-month follow-up.
Significant difference between 6- and 24-month follow-up.
Association between acetabular angles measured by CE angle of Wiberg and AI angle and pain levels measured by VAS (n = 146)
| Parameter | VAS rest | VAS activity | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coefficient | Coefficient | P-value | ||
| Preoperative CE/AI compared with preoperative VAS score | ||||
| AI angle | rs = 0.04 | rs = −0.09 | ||
| CE angle | rs = 0.02 | rs = 0.15 | ||
| Postoperative CE/AI compared with postoperative VAS score | ||||
| AI angle | rs = 0.07 | rs = 0.01 | ||
| CE angle | rs = −0.07 | rs = 0.03 | ||
| Change in CE/AI compared with change in VAS score | ||||
| AI angle | ||||
| CE angle | ||||
Note:
rs, Spearman correlation coefficient;
β, two-part model; logistic regression coefficient.