| Literature DB >> 30923570 |
Navid Ziran1, Gillian L S Soles2, Joel M Matta3.
Abstract
Acetabular fractures are fractures that extend into the hip joint and pose a challenge for orthopaedic trauma surgeons. The first known descriptions of surgical fixation of acetabular fractures were case reports in 1943. In 1964, Robert Judet, Jean Judet, and Émile Letournel published a landmark article describing a classification system and surgical approaches to treat acetabular fractures. These teachings had a significant effect on clinical outcomes after surgical fixation of acetabular fractures. In 1980, Letournel demonstrated 80% good-to-excellent results in 492 hips, and in 2012, Joel Matta demonstrated 79% survivorship in 816 patients follow surgical acetabular fixation. Both Letournel and Matta have definitively shown that anatomic reduction of the fracture is the most influential factor predictive of clinical outcome. The intent of this review is to summarize the salient factors affecting clinical outcomes after surgical treatment of acetabular fractures.Entities:
Keywords: Acetabular fracture; Hip joint; Post-traumatic arthritis; Surgical fixation; Survivorship
Year: 2019 PMID: 30923570 PMCID: PMC6420740 DOI: 10.1186/s13037-019-0196-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Saf Surg ISSN: 1754-9493
Fig. 1Anteroposterior (a), obturator oblique (b), and iliac oblique (c) view of a T-shaped fracture showing displacement of the femoral head and inadequate roof arc measurement. Surgery is indicated. Permission was granted for utilization of this figure in this review
Fig. 2Anteroposterior (a), obturator oblique (b), and iliac oblique (c) view of a T-shaped fracture showing congruence of the femoral head out of traction and adequate roof-arc measurements. Closed treatment is indicated. Permission was granted for utilization of this figure in this review
Fig. 3a Bone-density mapping of 5 mm of subchdral bone in an intact right acetabulum couresy of Lubovsky et al. 2013. The highest bone density is in the superior and posterior portions of the acetabulum. Injury to these regions tends to correlate with worse prognosis. Density map of a fractured left acetabulum is shown in panel b. Fracture lines are marked as yellow circles and a bony defect is shown in dark blue. Permission was granted for figure utilization in this review
Fig. 4Line drawing and (A, b) and anteroposterior (B), iliac oblique (C) radiographs of the “gull-sign.” The fragment is a partial fracture of the posterior column (A) not including the ischial tuberosity; it involves the posterior portion of the quadrilateral surface, the ischial spine, and the roof is hinged inwards. This displacement of the posterior quadrilateral surface manifests as a re-duplication of the ilioischial line and the rotated roof segment, adjacent to the intact roof, appears as a gull in flight. Permission was granted for utilization of this figure in this review
Outcome studies of operative treatment of displaced acetabular fractures listed in order of number of cases surgically treated with follow-up, year of publication, country of origin, number of cases, average follow-up period (F/U yrs), G-E results OR survivorship (% survival at 10 or 20 yrs), and negative prognostic factors
| Author | Year | Country | Cases (F/U yrs) | G-E Result/Survivorship | Negative prognostic factors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tannast/Matta et al [ | 2012 | USA | 816 (2–20) |
85% (10YR)
| FHI, PW, AGE, DISP, MI |
| Letournel/Judet [ | 1993 | FRANCE | 492 (1–33) | 80% | PC/PW, AW, PR |
| Mears et al [ | 2003 | USA | 424 (9.3) | 89% | PR, FN, DEL > 11, AF, SI, FHI, OB, AW, AGE |
| Matta [ | 1996 | USA | 255 (6) | 76% | AGE, FHI, SI, TT/PW |
| Clarke-Jenssen et al [ | 2017 | NORWAY | 253 (12) | 86% (10YRS) | FHI, SI |
| Madhu et al [ | 2006 | UK | 237 (2.9) | 76% | DEL > 15 (EF), DEL > 10(AF) |
| Murphy et ala [ | 2003 | IRELAND | 180 (6.3) | 78% | AF, AGE, PR > 3, HO, LC |
| Rommens et al [ | 1997 | BELGIUM | 175 (2) | 76% | TT/PW |
| Mayo [ | 1994 | USA | 163 (3.7) | 75% | – |
| Briffa et al [ | 2011 | UK | 161 (11.3) | 72% | AGE, DEL > 15, PR, PC/TT, FHI |
| Pennal et ala [ | 1980 | CANADA | 103 (7.25) | – | FX, WB, PR, AGE, PELVIS |
| Wright et al [ | 1994 | USA | 87 (3.6) | 45% | DL, HO, AVN, AGE, PR, EXP |
| Zha et alb [ | 2013 | CHINA | 86 (3.2) | 84% | CPWF, FHI, PR |
| Fica et al [ | 1998 | CHILE | 84 (5.5) | 67% | TT, PR, AGE, AVN |
| Zhi et al [ | 2011 | CHINA | 82 (2.8) | 71% | FX, AGE, LE FX, PR, DEL, DL |
| Rommens et al [ | 2011 | GERMANY | 77 (3.7) | 70% | CPWF, SI, IAF |
| Almedia et al [ | 2011 | BRAZIL | 76 (4.9) | 81% | PR, LOR, DI |
| Deo et al [ | 2001 | UK | 74 (2.6) | 74% | FH, PR, NERVE/DL |
| Chen et al [ | 2000 | TAIWAN | 73 (7.5) | 74% | PR |
| Uchida et al [ | 2013 | JAPAN | 71 (8.6) | 90% | PR, AVN, SI |
| Ragnarsson et al [ | 1992 | SWEDEN | 55 (15) | 60% | PR |
| Heeg et al [ | 1990 | HOLLAND | 54 (9.6) | 61% | PR, HO |
| Kebaish et al [ | 1991 | CANADA | 54 (4.7) | 86% | EXP, PR |
| Ruesch/Mast et al [ | 1994 | USA | 53 (1+) | 81% | N/A |
| De Ridder et al [ | 1994 | HOLLAND | 51 (3) | 76% | – |
| Oranksy et al [ | 1993 | ITALY | 50 (3.5) | 76% | DEL > 21, PR, EXP |
| Chiu et alc [ | 1996 | CHINA | 27 (7) | 81% | – |
| Brueton [ | 1993 | UK | 26 (2.2) | 61% | PR, DEL > 17 |
G-E results good to excellent results, FHI femoral head injury, CPWF comminuted posterior wall fragment, AW anterior wall fracture, PR poor reduction, SI subchondral impaction, IAF intra-articular fragment, FX fracture pattern, WB damage to wb dome, PELVIS injury to the pelvic ring, AGE patient age > 40, FN ipsilateral fem. neck fx, AF associated fx, EF elementary fx, EXP surgeon experience, DEL delay to surgery (i.e. delay > 15 days), TT t-shaped acetabular fracture, PW posterior wall acetabular fracture, DI deep infection, LOR loss of reduction, NERVE nerve injury, DL dislocation, LE FX lower extremity fracture, OB obesity, HO heterotopic ossification, LC local complications
a This study utilized different surgical approaches
b Cohort of elderly patients
c Cohort of operatively treated posterior wall fractures
Survivorship of operatively-treated acetabular fractures according to fracture type and other characteristics
| Survivorship (95% Confidence Interval) (%) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Two Years | Five Years | Ten Years | Twenty Years | Median Time to Failure | |
| Entire series ( | 91 (90–92) | 88 (87–90) | 85 (84–87) | 79 (76–81) | 1.5 |
| Elementary fracture type ( | 91 (89–93) | 86 (84–89) | 84 (81–87) | 73 (68–79) | 1.3 |
| Anterior wall ( | 91 (82–100) | 68 (53–84) | 68 (53–84) | 34 (9–59) | 2.3 |
| Anterior column ( | 95 (92–97) | 92 (88–95) | 87 (83–91) | 77 (70–85) | 3.0 |
| Posterior wall ( | 88 (84–91) | 82 (78–86) | 81 (77–85) | 76 (71–82) | 1.2 |
| Posterior column ( | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | – |
| Transverse ( | 89 (83–95) | 89 (83–95) | 89 (83–95) | 89 (83–95) | 0.3 |
| Associated fracture type ( | 92 (91–93) | 89 (88–91) | 86 (84–87) | 80 (78–83) | 1.6 |
| Posterior column, posterior wall ( | 85 (78–92) | 85 (78–92) | 85 (78–92) | 85 (78–92) | 0.5 |
| Transverse, posterior wall ( | 89 (86–91) | 85 (82–88) | 81 (78–85) | 74 (68–80) | 1.5 |
| T-shaped ( | 89 (85–92) | 85 (81–89) | 77 (72–81) | 74 (65–84) | 1.6 |
| Ant. column, post. Hemitrans. ( | 92 (89–95) | 92 (89–95) | 88 (84–92) | 75 (65–84) | 1.3 |
| Both columns ( | 96 (94–97) | 83 (91–95) | 91 (89–93) | 87 (83–90) | 2.2 |
| Initial displacement | |||||
| ≥ 20 mm ( | 86 (84–89) | 84 (81–86) | 78 (75–81) | 68 (63–73) | 1.3 |
| ≤ 20 mm ( | 93 (92–95) | 90 (89–91) | 88 (86–89) | 83 (81–85) | 1.9 |
| Treatment delay | |||||
| < 21 days ( | 93 (92–94) | 89 (88–91) | 86 (85–88) | 79 (77–82) | 2.0 |
| > 21 days ( | 82 (78–86) | 80 (75–84) | 74 (69–79) | 74 (69–79) | 0.9 |
| Previous surgery | |||||
| Yes ( | 60 (38–82) | 30 (6–54) | – | – | 0.8 |
| No ( | 92 (91–93) | 89 (87–90) | 85 (84–87) | 79 (77–81) | 1.6 |
| Age | |||||
| < 40 yr. ( | 96 (95–97) | 95 (94–96) | 92 (91–94) | 87 (84–89) | 2.3 |
| 40–65 yr. ( | 88 (86–90) | 83 (81–86) | 81 (79–83) | 74 (71–77) | 1.3 |
| > 65 yr. ( | 83 (79–87) | 79 (75–83) | 70 (65–76) | 51 (38–64) | 0.8 |
| > 75 ( | 80 (73–87) | 74 (66–83) | 65 (54–76) | – | 0.6 |
Fig. 5Pre-operative (a–c), immediate post-operative (d), and 21-year post-operative radiographs (e–h) of a patient after reduction and fixation of a both-column acetabular fracture. At 21 years, the left hip superior joint space is intact and patient has a good clinical outcome
Fig. 6Pre-operative (a–c) radiographs and CT (d–g) of a patient who sustained a comminuted transtectal transverse acetabular fracture with involvement of the posterior wall
Fig. 7Post-operative AP pelvis (a) and Judet view (b–c) radiographs of a transtectal + posterior wall acetabular fracture after limited open reduction internal fixation and acute total hip arthroplasty