| Literature DB >> 32509333 |
Thomas J Holme1, Marta Karbowiak2, Magnus Arnander1,2, Yael Gelfer1,2.
Abstract
The optimal management and long-term outcomes of olecranon fractures in the paediatric population is not well understood. This systematic review aims to analyse the literature on the management of paediatric olecranon fractures and the long-term implications.A systematic review of several databases was conducted according to PRISMA guidelines. English-language studies evaluating the management of isolated paediatric olecranon fractures were included. Data extracted included demographics, classifications, conservative and operative treatment methods and outcomes.Fifteen articles fitting the inclusion criteria were included. There were 11 case series and four retrospective comparative series. The reported studies included 299 fractures in 280 patients.The mechanism of injury was predominantly low energy. Fractures displaced < 4 mm were treated non-operatively with almost universally good results, with the majority being treated with cast immobilization. Fractures displaced > 4 mm were commonly treated operatively with generally good results, with tension band wire and suture fixation being the most common treatment modalities. Weight > 50 kg was associated with failure of suture fixation.In those studies that reported olecranon fractures with associated elbow injuries (e.g. radial head fractures) outcomes were poorer. Forty-six fractures were in patients with osteogenesis imperfecta, who sustained a higher rate of re-fracture after removal of metalwork and contralateral olecranon fracture.Despite a relatively low evidence base pool of studies, the aggregate data support the non-operative treatment of isolated undisplaced olecranon fractures with good results, and support the operative treatment of fractures displaced ≥ 4 mm. Cite this article: EFORT Open Rev 2020;5:280-288. DOI: 10.1302/2058-5241.5.190082.Entities:
Keywords: fracture; olecranon; paediatric
Year: 2020 PMID: 32509333 PMCID: PMC7265082 DOI: 10.1302/2058-5241.5.190082
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EFORT Open Rev ISSN: 2058-5241
Fig. 1Flow diagram of Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) process.
Risk of bias assessment
| Study | Risk of bias | Issues leading to risk of bias |
|---|---|---|
| Caterini et al | High | Only 39/63 patients included clinical outcomes, e.g. range of motion missing, surgical details missing |
| Corradin et al | Moderate | Short follow up period |
| Gaddy et al | Moderate | Radiographic analysis subject to bias |
| Gicquel et al | High | Unclear selection process; variable follow up periods; surgical techniques unclear |
| Gwynne-Jones | Moderate | No assessor blinding of interventions; intervention groups not clearly defined |
| Karlsson et al | Low | |
| Kim et al | Moderate | Unclear selection process |
| Maffulli et al | High | Unclear selection process; interventions and outcomes inadequately reported |
| Maity et al | Low | |
| Matthews | High | Unclear selection criteria; interventions, outcomes and follow up periods inadequately reported |
| Newell | High | Unclear selection criteria; interventions, outcomes and follow up periods inadequately reported |
| Papavasiliou et al | High | Unclear selection criteria; interventions, outcomes and follow up periods inadequately reported |
| Perkins et al | Moderate | Outcomes inadequately reported (e.g. patient-reported outcomes, range of motion) |
| Persiani et al | Low | |
| Zionts et al | High | Unclear selection criteria, interventions and outcomes inadequately reported |
Fig. 2Flowchart of proposed treatment algorithm.
Note. OI, osteogenesis imperfecta.
Study/patient characteristics
| Authors | Study type | Fractures | Mean age (years) | Mechanism | Fracture classification | Indication for surgery | Mean follow up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caterini et al[ | Case series | 23 | 7.4 | Not stated | Morphology and displacement | > 2 mm displacement | 25 years |
| Corradin et al[ | Retrospective comparative study | 22 | 10.5 | Not stated | AO PCCF | > 2 mm displacement | 18 months |
| Gaddy et al[ | Case series | 28 | 8.5 | Low energy: 29; High energy: 6 | Displacement | ≥ 3 mm displacement | 5 years |
| Gicquel et al[ | Case series | 4 | 9.9 | Not stated | Bracq | Not stated | 13 months |
| Gwynne-Jones[ | Retrospective comparative study (OI and non-OI patients) | 12 | OI: 12.1; Non-OI: 14.3 | OI: 8 low energy; Non-OI: 4 high energy | Salter Harris and displacement | Not stated | 28 months |
| Karlsson et al[ | Case series | 23 | 11.0 | Low energy: 13; High energy 10 | Horne and Tanzer and displacement | ≥ 4 mm displacement | 19 years |
| Kim et al[ | Case series | 10 | 11.7 | Not stated | AO PCCF | > 2 mm displacement or step off | 6–12 months |
| Maffulli et al[ | Case series | 12 | 13.5 | All apophysitis/overuse injuries | None | Not stated | 6 years |
| Maity et al[ | Case series | 7 | 7.3 | Not stated | Evans | > 2 mm displacement | 30 months |
| Matthews[ | Case series | 24 | Not stated | Not stated | Displacement and associated injuries | > 4 mm displacement or step off | 12 weeks to 3 years |
| Newell[ | Case series | 35 | Not stated | Low energy: 20 | None | Not stated | Not stated |
| Papavasiliou et al[ | Case series | 15 | Not stated | High energy: 15 | Intra/extra-articular | Not stated | Not stated |
| Perkins et al[ | Retrospective comparative study | 46 | 12.3 | Not stated | None | ≥ 2 mm displacement | 9 months |
| Persiani et al[ | Retrospective comparative study (OI patients) | 21 | 12.0 | Low energy: 13; High energy: 8 | Mayo | Not stated | 3 years |
| Zionts et al[ | Case series (OI patients) | 17 | 10.0 | Low energy: 14 | Morphology | Not stated | 53 months |
Note. AO PCCF, AO Pediatric Comprehensive Classification of Long-Bone Fractures; OI, osteogenesis imperfecta.
Conservative management and outcomes
| Authors | Cast | Collar and cuff or sling | Other | Clinical outcomes | Radiological outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caterini et al[ | 18 | – | – | Custom classification. Good: 18 | No evidence of OA |
| Gaddy et al[ | 18 | – | – | Graves & Canale classification – satisfactory: 18 | No evidence of growth disturbance of the olecranon apophysis |
| Karlsson et al[ | 9 | – | 3 (mobilization) | Custom classification Excellent: 12 | No non-union or elbow OA |
| Maffulli et al[ | – | – | 12 (rest, cryotherapy, physiotherapy) | Nine returned to same level of competitive gymnastics; three gave up due to other injuries | All healed uneventfully |
| Matthews[ | 8 | 16 | – | Collar and cuff 16/16 satisfied, cast 4/8 satisfied (four had temporarily restricted ROM but resolved by 24 weeks) | No non-unions |
| Newell[ | 24 | 10 | – | All regained full range of motion by 10 weeks, sling treatment had full pain-free range of motion at 3 weeks. Two treated in cast lacked 15 degrees of extension at 6 weeks but regained by 10 weeks. | Not stated |
| Papavasiliou et al[ | 10 | – | 1 (displaced fracture – mobilization as refused treatment) | Non-operative: 10 regained normal, pain-free range of motion. The one who refused treatment had 30 degrees loss of extension and 15-degree flexor lag. | Pseudoarthrosis in displaced fracture in patient refusing treatment |
Note. OA, osteoarthritis; ROM, range of motion.
Surgical management and outcomes
| Authors | TBW | TBS | Other | Post-op rehab | Clinical outcomes | Radiological outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caterini et al[ | – | – | 4 (cerclage wire), 1 (screw fixation) | Cast for 4 weeks | Good: 3/4 cerclage wires, 1/1 screw fixation | Severe radiographic OA in 1 treated with cerclage wires due to inadequate reduction |
| Corradin et al[ | – | 10 | 12 (screw fixation) | Cast for 4–6 weeks | All returned to previous levels of daily and sporting activity. TBS: Quick DASH 1.82, 1 case 15–20 degrees loss of extension. Screw fixation: QuickDASH 3.42, 3 cases 15–20 degrees loss of extension | All cases good reduction with < 2 mm residual displacement |
| Gaddy et al[ | 10 | – | – | Cast (1–4 weeks) then protected active-motion therapy | All satisfactory | No evidence of growth disturbance of the olecranon apophysis |
| Gicquel et al[ | – | – | 4 (Fixano screw fixation) | Cast for 3–4 weeks | Excellent (3), good (1 – imperfect reduction that had not remodelled by 17 months) | Radiological – Satisfactory (3), poor (1 – persistence of displacement following surgery) |
| Gwynne-Jones[ | 4 | – | – | Cast for 3 weeks | Limited ROM (10 degrees loss of extension): 2/4 | Not stated |
| Karlsson et al[ | 2 | – | 6 (figure of eight wire), 1 (rushpin), 2 (closed reduction and casting) | Cast for 2–6 weeks (mean 4 weeks) | Excellent: 9 | No non-union or elbow OA |
| Kim et al[ | – | 10 | – | Hinged elbow brace (8 weeks). ROM exercises after 1 week | All had full ROM, 100% MEPS, and elective removal of pins under sedation at 12 weeks post-op | All had bony union with no loss of reduction or growth arrest |
| Maity et al[ | – | 7 | – | Cast for 4 weeks | Excellent in all patients, no complications | Excellent in all patients, no complications |
| Newell[ | – | – | 1 (soft tissue suture) | Cast for 1 month (extension) | The single operative case regained ROM 0-130 degrees by 3 months | Not stated |
| Papavasiliou et al[ | 4 | – | – | Cast for 3 weeks | All painless but with 20 degrees loss of extension | All had overgrowth of olecranon epiphysis |
| Perkins et al[ | 17 | 29 | – | Cast for 2–4 weeks | Hardware removal at 6 months (12/17 TBW, 17/29 TBS). Revision fixation at mean 23 days (1/17 TBW (plate), 4/29 TBS (1 TBW, 1 plate, 1 screw, 1 TBS). Revision group in TBS older and heavier | Union 89% (41/46) following initial surgery |
Notes. TBS, tension band suture; TBW, tension band wire; OA, osteoarthritis; Quick DASH, Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand; ROM, range of motion; MEPS, Mayo Elbow Performance Score.
Management and outcomes in patients with osteogenesis imperfecta
| Authors | Treatment | Post-op rehab | Mean follow up | Clinical outcomes | Radiological outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gwynne-Jones[ | 1 cast (undisplaced), 6 TBW (displaced), 1 plate (non-union) | Cast (3 weeks) | 28 months | Cast: no refracture, ROM not noted. TBW: all healed but 2 later refractured post metalwork removal after subsequent fall. All but one limited extension 10–15 degrees. Prominent metalwork requiring wire removal in 2 cases, and TBW removal in 3 cases. | Not stated |
| Persiani et al[ | 11 TBW, 10 Screw fixation | Hinged brace (3 weeks) | 3 years | 3 years – no pain in either group, 15-degree loss of extension in screw fixation group versus no decreased ROM in TBW group. Two screws revised to new screws, one screw revised to TBW for migration, two screws revised to TBW for re-fracture. | At 3 years, complete bone healing, no implant migration in TBW group, one migration in screw fixation group, no periarticular calcification |
| Zionts et al[ | 4 cast, 3 TBW, 8 TBS, 2 not specified | Cast (3–6 weeks) | 53 months | All clinical union by 6 weeks, nine elective removal of metalwork – two TBW cases refractured over one month post removal requiring re-operation. None had pain or limitation of function at final follow up. | All radiological union by 6 weeks. Out of seven followed to skeletal maturity, no deformity of elbow, only mild irregularity of contour of proximal portion of olecranon |
Footnotes: TBW (tension band wire), ROM (range of motion), TBS (tension band suture).