| Literature DB >> 32209079 |
Giovanni Luigi Di Gennaro1, Stefano Stallone1, Eleonora Olivotto2, Paola Zarantonello1, Marina Magnani1, Tullia Tavernini1, Stefano Stilli1, Giovanni Trisolino3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The management of painful rigid flatfoot (RFF) with talocalcaneal coalition (TCC) is controversial. We aimed to compare operative and nonoperative treatment in children with RFF and TCC.Entities:
Keywords: Allograft; Arthroereisis; Child; Flatfoot; Manipulation under anesthesia; Surgical treatment; Tarsal coalition, talocalcaneal
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32209079 PMCID: PMC7093982 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-020-03213-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Fig. 1Illustrations of the surgical technique step by step. a A medial approach is performed with an incision over the sustentaculum tali, centered to the coalition. b The tibialis posterior tendon is retracted dorsally, while flexor hallucis longus and the flexor digitorum longus tendons are retracted plantarly, exposing the bone bridge. c After the identification of the talonavicular joint anteriorly and the residual talocalcaneal joint posteriorly, the bridge is excised using osteotomes. d The joint is open with a spreader, gaining the separation and complete motion of the talocalcaneal joint. e A lateral incision is performed over the sinus tarsi, exposing the lateral facet of the talus. A frozen fascia lata allograft is folded in two layers before positioning. f The fascia lata allograft is passed from lateral to medial into the tarsal canal and the two layers of the graft are placed covering the bony surfaces of the resected area. g The edges of the graft are fastened with suture anchors or absorbable stitches. h A calcaneo-stop screw is inserted in the talus to keep the correction
Baseline demographic, clinical and radiographic data
| N° of children (feet) | 34 (47) | 21 (34) | .07 |
| Male/female ratio | 23/11 | 12/9 | .35 |
| Age (years) [mean ± SD (range)] | 11.6 ± 2.1 (9–17) | 12.2 ± 1.2 (10–15) | .07 |
| AOFAS-AHS pain [mean ± SD (range)] | 28 ± 4 (20–40) | 28 ± 5 (20–30) | .71 |
| AOFAS-AHS function [mean ± SD (range)] | 42 ± 3 (35–47) | 42 ± 4 (27–47) | .76 |
| AOFAS-AHS alignment [mean ± SD (range)] | 1 ± 2 (0–10) | 1 ± 2 (0–5) | .29 |
| AOFAS-AHS tot [mean ± SD (range)] | 70 ± 7 (55–87) | 70 ± 7 (47–82) | .47 |
| Calcaneal Pitch (°) [mean ± SD (range)] | 13.7 ± 3.9 (9–20) | 14.7 ± 3.1(11–21) | .48 |
| Meary’s angle (°) [mean ± SD (range)] | 12.6 ± 4.3 (8–20) | 13.3 ± 4.7 (9–21) | .82 |
| Heel valgus (°) [mean ± SD (range)] | 23.7 ± 8.8 (6.6–46.8) | 26.4 ± 7.7 (12.8–38.5) | .37 |
| JSN (mm) [mean ± SD (range)] | 2.8 ± 1.0 (0.6–4.8) | 2.7 ± 0.9 (1.7–4.8) | .28 |
| Rozansky classification | I: 13 | I: 18 | .19 |
| II: 9 | II: 4 | ||
| III: 12 | III: 7 | ||
| IV: 8 | IV: 4 | ||
| V: 5 | V: 1 |
Comparison between baseline and latest follow-up AOFAS-AHS in the nonoperative and operative groups. The results are expressed as estimated means
| Clinical outcome | Group A (nonoperative) | Group B (operative) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| baseline | follow-up | MD | baseline | follow-up | MD | ||
| AOFAS-AHS pain | 28 (26–29) | 30* (28–32) | 28 (26–30) | 37** (34–39) | |||
| AOFAS-AHS function | 42 (41–43) | 43* (41–45) | 42 (40–43) | 47** (45–49) | |||
| AOFAS-AHS alignment | 1 (0–2) | 5** (4–6) | 1 (0–2) | 10** (9–11) | |||
| AOFAS-AHS total | 70 (68–73) | 78** (74–82) | 71 (68–73) | 94** (89–98) | |||
The estimated means were adjusted by inverse probability of treatment weights (IPTW) and follow-up duration (covariates were calculated at 6.5 years of follow-up), using the patient as random effect to avoid violation of the principle of independence in bilateral cases. 95% confidence interval of the estimated mean is reported in brackets
MD = Mean Difference between baseline and latest follow-up AOFAS-AHS
The asterisks refer to the statistical difference between baseline and follow-up values within the same group. *: difference is significant at p < .05. **: difference is significant at p < .0005
The P-value in the last column is referred to the statistical difference between the MD of the two groups
Post-operative clinical and functional outcome measured and FADI
| Clinical outcome | Group A (nonoperative) | Group B (operative) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Crude mean | Estimated mean | Crude mean | Estimated mean | ||
| FADI tot | 83 (57–100) | 81 (78–84) | 92 (64–100) | 93 (87–98) | <.0005 |
| FADI pain | 87 (50–100) | 85 (82–100) | 94 (69–100) | 97 (92–100) | <.0005 |
| FADI function | 85 (59–100) | 84 (81–87) | 93 (64–100) | 94 (90–98) | .03 |
| FADI sport | 74 (47–100) | 72 (68–77) | 87 (63–100) | 86 (80–93) | <.0005 |
Group A: non-operative group. Group B (operative group). The results are expressed as crude and estimated means. The crude means are reported as mean and range. The estimated means were adjusted by inverse probability of treatment weights (IPTW) and follow-up duration (covariates were calculated at 6.5 years of follow-up), using the patient as random effect to avoid violation of the principle of independence in bilateral cases. 95% confidence interval of the estimated mean is reported in brackets. The P-value in the last column is referred to the statistical difference between the estimated means of the two groups
Fig. 2Clinical and radiographic features of 12 years old boy with RFF and TCC. a Clinical aspect on podoscope. b Antero-posterior and lateral radiographs of the same patient showing the collapse of the longitudinal arch, hindfoot valgus, and forefoot abduction. The “talar beak”, evident on the neck of the talus, suggests the presence of TCC. c Coronal CT scan of both feet showing “type I” TCC according to the Rozansky’s classification. d Post-operative clinical aspect on podoscope 1 month after surgery. e Radiographic aspect showing the screw arthroeresis with correction of the flatfoot. f Radiographs 6 years after screw removal, showing that the correction is maintained, and the radiographic parameters are restored
The summarized results of systematic literature review of selected papers. Case reports with less than 3 cases were not reported
| Author, Year | N° Patients (N° feet) | Mean age at Treatment | Type of treatment | Follow-up (years) | Rate of good/excellent results | Complications/recurrence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Swiontkowski, 1983 [ | 10 (10) | 11–45 | Resection (4) Fusion (6) | – | 100% | none |
| Elkus, 1986 [ | 8 ft | 13 (8–19) | resection | 2 (1–7) | 8/8 (100%) | none |
| Olney, 1987 [ | 9 (10) | 14 (10–22) | Resection + fat interposition | 3.3 | 8/10 cases (80%) | 1 patient had further surgery for incomplete resection |
| Scranton, 1987 [ | 14 (23) | 24 (11–55) | Cast immobilization (5) Resection (14) Fusion (4) | 3.9 (2.2–9.5) | 23/23 (100%) | none |
| Danielsson, 1987 [ | 3 (3) | – | Resection + fat interposition | 1.5–14 | 100% | none |
| Takakura, 1991 [ | 42 (67) | 17.3 (5–54) | a) Nonoperative treatment: 24 (33) b) Operative treatment: 1. resection: 26 (33) 2. fusion: 3 (3). | 5.3 (2–11.2) | a) Nonoperative treatment: 68% b) Operative treatment: 83% | a) Nonoperative treatment: residual pain in 8 ft (26%) limited motion in nine feet (29%) b) Operative treatment: mild residual pain in 4/33 ft treated by excision of the coalition (12%) subtalar motion unchanged or decreased in 7/30 ft treated by excision of the coalition (23%) sensory disturbance of the sole in 3/14 ft treated by excision of the coalition (21%) No complications reported in patients treated by subtalar fusion |
| Salomao, 1992 [ | 22 (32) | 14 (10–23) | resection + fat interposition. | 2 (1–5.5) | 78% of feet became completely painless and 22% achieved relief of pain. Improved deformity in 69% Improved range of motion in 75%. | none |
| Kumar, 1992 [ | 16 (18) | 14 (7–19) | a) resection (3 cases) b) resection + fat interposition (6 cases) c) resection + split flexor hallucis longus tendon interposition (9 cases) | 4 (2–8) | 12/14 (87.5%) | 1 relapse of the coalition with poor clinical outcome |
| Wilde, 1994 [ | 17 (20) | 13 (9–15) | Resection. | 1–9 | 10/20 (50%) | Residual RFF in 10/20 ft (50%) |
| Kitaoka, 1997 [ | 11 (14) | 17 (13–32) | a) resection (9 cases) b) resection + fat or split flexor hallucis longus tendon interposition (5 cases) | 6 (2–13) | 9/14 (64%) | none |
| McCormack,1997 [ | 8 (9) | 13.6 (10.5–22) | Resection + fat interposition | 11.5 (10–16) | 7/9 (78%) | none |
| Comfort, 1998 [ | 16 (20) | 14 ± 2 | Resection | 2.4 (2–6.2) | 12/20 (60%) | Four (20%) patients underwent further surgery. |
| Dutoit, 1998 [ | 8 (9) | 14.1 | Resection | 4.5 (3–11.3) | 4/8 (50%) | none |
| Luhmann, 1998 [ | 20 (25) | 12.5 (9–16) | Resection + fat interposition | 2.5 (1–8) | 19/25 (76%) | 2 superfical infection 2 coalition reformation. 5 cases had further surgery (peroneal tendon lengthening, 1 lateral column lengthening 3 arthrodesis) |
| Raikin, 1999 [ | 10 (14) | 12 (9–16) | Resection + split flexor hallucis longus tendon interposition | 4.2 (2.7–5) | 12/14 (86%) | none |
| Giannini, 2003 [ | 12 (14) | 13 (9–18) | Resection + subtalar arthroereisis by a bioreabsorbable implant | 3.3 (3–5.3) | 11/14 (79%) | none |
| Westberry, 2003 [ | 10 (12) | 12.7 (9–17.9) | Complete removal of the coalition with removal of the sustentaculum tali | 5.1 (1.5–8.7) | 9/12 (75%) | One postoperative wound infection. One patient required subsequent lateral column lengthening |
| Fleming, 2004 [ | 12 (14) | (11–14) | Resection + fat interposition | 0.5–2 | 100% | none |
| Kernbach, 2008 [ | 3 (6) | 14 (12–17) | Resection + flatfoot reconstruction* | 3.3 (1.3–4.5) | 6/6 (100%) | none |
| Sperl, 2010 [ | 3 (3) | 13.4 (10–15) | Resection + deepithelialized skin flap interposition. | 3.3 (0.5–8) | 3/3 (100%) | none |
| Lisella, 2011 [ | 7 (8) | 15 (12–18) | Resection + reconstruction | 3 (2–5) | 8/8 (100%) | 1 infection 1 deep vein thrombosis |
| Mosca, 2012 [ | 8 (13) | 13 (10–18) | a) 5 patients (9 ft) with RFF and TCC (coalition area > 50%): CLO + Strayer or TAL** + medial plication. b) 1 patient (2 ft) with RFF and TCC (coalition area > 50%): simultaneous CLO + resection of the middle facet coalition + Strayer. c) 2 patients (2 ft) with residual RFF after the resection of a middle facet tarsal coalition: CLO + TAL + talonavicular arthrodesis (1 ft) | 2–15 | Group 1: 9/9 (100%) Group 2: 2/2 (100%) Group 3: 1/2 (50%) | Group 1: 1 patient developed pain under the fourth and fifth metatarsal heads on both feet. Grouo 2: None. Group 3: 1 patient underwent talonavicular arthrodesis for symptomatic arthritis |
| Gantsoudes, 2012 [ | 32 (49) | 13 | TCC resection + fat graft interposition | 3.5 | 42/49 (84%) | 11 ft (22%) underwent a total of 12 secondary procedures involving the lower extremity, including 2 revisions (4%). |
| Khoshbin, 2013 [ | 11 (13) | 12 ± 2.5 | resection alone (1) or with interposition of fat/wax graft (7), flexor digitorum Longus (4) or flexor hallucis longus (1) | 2.2 | 13/13 (100%) | none |
| Jagodzinski, 2013 [ | 8 (9) | 15 (11–20) | Arthroscopic resection. | 1–5.5 | 7/9 (78%) | 1 patient developed scar sensitivity at one of the portal sites. 1 patient had posterior tibial nerve damage. 1 patient (2 ft) required further surgery (fusion) |
| De Wouters, 2014 [ | 6 (7) | 14 (11–16) | Resection using 3D printed cutting guides + fascia lata allograft interposition. | 1.7 | 7/7 (100%) | none |
| Kemppainen, 2014 [ | 19 (26) | 13.5 (9–17) | Resection with or without intra-operative assessment through a portable CT scanner | 2 (0,5–4) | 19/26 (73%) | 1 case required further surgery |
| Krief, 2015 [ | 3 (3) | 10 (8–12) | Resection + interposition of a sterile silicone sheet | 3.3 (1–6.7) | 3/3 (100%) | none |
| Knörr, 2015 [ | 15 (16) | 11.8 (8–15) | Arthroscopic resection | 2.3 (1–3.7) | 16/16 (100%) | Complex regional pain syndrome in 1 patient. No recurrences. |
| Hamel, 2016 [ | 80 ft | 8–17 | a) resection + fat interposition (31) b) resection + fat interposition + tarsal osteotomy (26) c) fusion (20) d) fusion + tarsal osteotomy (3) | 3 | Group 1 27/31 (87%) Group 2 20/26 (77%) Group 3 18/20 (90%) Group 4 3/3 (100%) | 3 cases underwent further surgery |
| Mahan, 2017 [ | 36 (51) | 13.1 ± 2.6 | resection | 2.7 | 41/51 (80%) | 2 patients developed superficial wound infection. |
| Masquijo, 2017 [ | 13 (14) | 14 (11–16) | 7 patients (8 ft): simultaneous TCC resection of the coalition and reconstruction; 6 patients (6 ft): isolated reconstruction | 3.7. | 14/14 (100%) | 1: Hardware prominence; 1: superficial infection |
| Hubert, 2018 [ | 10 (12) | 12.2 (10–18) | TCC resection and interposition of pediculated flap of the tibialis posterior tendon sheath | 4.8 | 12/12 (100%) | none |
| Shirley, 2018 [ | 16 (16) | 11.4 | Conservative treatment. | 1.7 (0.2–7.4) | 9/14 (54%) | 38% of cases required surgery |
| Present Study | 55 (81) | 11.8 (9–17) | Group 1: non operative treatment (47); group 2: coalition resection, graft interposition and subtalar arthroereisis (34) | 6.6 (3–12) | 26/47 (55%) 26/34 (76%) | No complications, but 6 patients (7) in group 1 were unsatisfied and required surgery |