| Literature DB >> 32938491 |
Chun-Kuan Lu1,2, Wen-Chih Liu3,4,5, Chung-Chia Chang1, Chia-Lung Shih1, Yin-Chih Fu1,6, Jesse B Jupiter7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Distal radius fracture (DRF) is the most common upper extremity fracture that requires surgery. Operative treatment with a volar locking plate has proved to be the treatment of choice for unstable fractures. However, no consensus has been reached about the benefits of pronator quadratus (PQ) repair after volar plate fixation of DRF in terms of patient-reported outcome measures, pronation strength, and wrist mobility.Entities:
Keywords: Distal radius fracture; Pronation; Pronator quadratus; Volar plate
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32938491 PMCID: PMC7493143 DOI: 10.1186/s13018-020-01942-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Surg Res ISSN: 1749-799X Impact factor: 2.359
Fig. 1PRISMA flowchart. Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses flow diagram for searching and identifying the studies for inclusion in the analysis
Summary of the retrieved studies that compared between with and without pronator quadratus repair after distal radius fracture volar plating surgery
| Study (author, year) | Study design | Sex (M/F) | Fracture stage (A/B/C) | Mean age, years | Blinding | Randomization | Outcome measures | Follow-up timing | Country | Quality assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Si, 2012 | RCS | R: 15 (3/12) NR: 15 (5/10) | R: 0/15/0 NR: 0/15/0 | R: 57.6 (35–70) NR: 56.3 (48–70) | NA | NA | DASH and ROM | 3 days, 1 month, and 6 months | China | 8# |
| Hershman, 2013 | RCS | R: 62 (29/33) NR: 50 (21/29) | R: 13/10/29 NR: 17/12/21 | R: 53.8 (4) NR: 51.6 (4.5) | NA | R: hand fellow; NR: trauma fellow | DASH, VAS score, grip strength, and ROM | 6 weeks, 3 months, 6 months, and 12 months | USA | 8# |
| Tosti, 2013 | RCT | R: 33 (9/24) NR: 24 (4/20) | R: 8/1/24 NR: 2/1/21 | R: 51 (18.9) NR: 60 (13.7) | Double | Year of birth | DASH, VAS, ROM, and grip strength | 2 weeks, 6 weeks, 3 months, and 12 months | USA | 3* |
| Qian 2017 | RCS | R: 43 (NA) NR: 40 (NA) | R: 0/21/22 NR: 0/20/20 | R & NR: 52.2 (23–72) | NA | NA | DASH, ROM, and pronation/supination power | 13 months (11–19 months) | China | 8# |
| Hohendorff, 2018 | RCT | R: 20 (4/16) NR: 16 (6/10) | R: 14/0/6 NR: 8/1/7 | R: 64 (18–77) NR: 54 (18–80) | NA | Blinded envelope | DASH, VAS, ROM, grip strength, and pronation power | 12 months | Germany | 4* |
| Wang, 2018 | RCS | R: 25 (4/21) NR: 20 (4/16) | R: 0/12/13 NR: 0/8/12 | R: 53.6 NR: 57.8 | NA | NA | DASH, VAS, and ROM | 6 weeks and 6 months | China | 8# |
| Zhang, 2018 | RCT | R: 45 (29/16) NR: 45 (30/15) | R: 5/22/18 NR: 6/19/16 | R: 55.7 (3.4) NR: 54.1 (2.4) | Double | Admission sequence | VAS and ROM | 1 day, 3 days, 1 month, and 6 months | China | 2* |
| Cang, 2019 | RCS | R: 37 (NA) NR: 23 (NA) | R: 0/18/19 NR: 0/12/11 | R & NR: 40.9 (5.0) | NA | NA | ROM, DASH and pronation/supination power | 10.5 months (6–15 months) | China | 8# |
| Chao, 2019 | RCT | R: 42 (13/29) NR: 42 (15/27) | R: 9/25/8 NR: 7/24/11 | R: 48.7 (7.7) NR: 47.1 (8.5) | Single | Undescribed method | DASH, VAS, ROM, and grip strength | 2 weeks, 6 weeks, 3 months, and final (11–15 months) | China | 2* |
| Pathak, 2019 | RCS | R: 29 (11/18) NR: 34 (13/21) | R & NR: A2–C2 | R: 54.9 (24–77) N: 48.6 (22–72) | NA | NA | DASH, VAS, ROM, and grip strength | 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, and final (R: 35.2; NR: 38.6) | India | 8# |
| Sonntag, 2019 | RCT | R: 36 (5/31) NR: 36 (10/26) | R: 22/0/12 NR: 19/1/13 | R: 62.0 (10.8) NR: 63.6 (15.6) | Double | Randomized allocation sequence | DASH, PRWE, ROM, pronation, and grip strength | 2 weeks, 5 weeks, 3 months, 6 months, and 12 months | Denmark | 5* |
RCS retrospective case-control study, RCT randomized controlled trial, R repair, NR non-repair, NA not applicable, DASH Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand, ROM range of motion, VAS visual analog scale, MWS Mayo wrist score, PRWE patient-rated wrist evaluation
#The study was assessed using the Newcastle–Ottawa scale score
*The study was assessed using the Jadad scale score
Summary of the surgery and postoperative management details of the retrieved studies
| Study (author, year) | Plate | PQ repair method | Postoperative management |
|---|---|---|---|
| Si, 2012 | Unknown VLP | Direct interrupted (absorbable 2-0) | Physical therapy in 2 days |
| Hershman, 2013 | Stryker and Synthes VLP | NA | Splint for 2 weeks, full weight bearing in 6 weeks |
| Tosti, 2013 | Medartis (VA) and Synthes (VA) VLP | Figure-of-eight (Vicryl 2-0) | Immobilization for 2 weeks and then start of physical therapy |
| Qian 2017 | Synthes VLP | Figure-of-eight (Vicryl 3-0) | NA |
| Hohendorff, 2018 | Stryker (VA) VLP | PQ to BR (PDS 4-0) | Splint for 2 weeks and unlimited mobility in 4 weeks |
| Wang, 2018 | NA | Figure-of-eight (absorbable 4-0) | Physical therapy in 2 days |
| Zhang, 2018 | Unknown VLP | Direct interrupted (absorbable 2-0) | Physical therapy in 2 days |
| Cang, 2019 | Synthes VLP | Figure-of-eight (absorbable 3-0) | NA |
| Chao, 2019 | NA | Direct interrupted (absorbable 3-0) | Physical therapy in 1 weeks |
| Pathak, 2019 | NA | Direct interrupted (Vicryl 3-0) | Immobilization for 1–2 weeks and then start of physical therapy |
| Sonntag, 2019 | Stryker (VA), Synthes (VA) | Continuous with a minimum of four sutures (Vicryl 3-0) | Splint for 2 weeks and gradual weight bearing |
PQ pronator quadratus, NA not applicable, VLP volar locking plate, VA variable angle, PDS polydioxanone
Fig. 2Forest plots of the standardized mean differences in functional outcome, wrist strength, and pain score. Forest plots of the standardized mean differences in a Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand score, b pronation strength, c grip strength, and d visual analog scale score for pain between the two treatment arms
Fig. 3Forest plots of the standardized mean differences in wrist mobility. Forest plots of the standardized mean differences in wrist mobility between the two treatment arms: a extension, b flexion, c supination, d pronation, e radial deviation, and f ulnar deviation
Summary of the outcomes by meta-analysis
| With PQ repair | Without PQ repair | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pooled estimate | 95% CI | Pooled estimate | 95% CI | |||
| DASH | 24.73 | 16.22–33.25 | 8* | 22.15 | 9.86–34.44 | 8* |
| Pronation strength (kg cm) | 50.70 | 44.32–67.08 | 6* | 57.39 | 40.32–74.45 | 6* |
| Grip strength (kg) | 32.63 | 19.86–45.39 | 3 | 32.86 | 19.77–45.94 | 3 |
| VAS | 1.39 | 0.89–1.89 | 5 | 1.61 | 0.40–2.81 | 5 |
| Extension (degrees) | 62.84 | 45.09–80.59 | 6 | 63.94 | 52.31–75.57 | 6 |
| Flexion (degrees) | 62.18 | 48.99–75.36 | 6 | 63.23 | 53.05–73.41 | 6 |
| Supination (degrees) | 68.12 | 53.82–82.42 | 11* | 68.66 | 53.63–83.69 | 11* |
| Pronation (degrees) | 62.86 | 52.24–73.24 | 11* | 63.00 | 52.36–73.64 | 11* |
| Radial deviation (degrees) | 19.07 | 16.52–21.62 | 3 | 20.67 | 18.95–22.39 | 3 |
| Ulnar deviation (degrees) | 31.42 | 25.60–37.25 | 3 | 33.98 | 31.45–36.51 | 3 |
PQ pronator quadratus, SMD standardized mean difference, CI confidence interval, DASH Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand, VAS visual analog scale for pain
*Presented outcomes separately for AO type B and C fractures, which we counted as two studies
Fig. 4Forest plots of the standardized mean differences in pronation strength. Forest plots of the standardized mean differences in pronation strength between the two treatment arms for AO type B distal radius fractures
Results of the Egger test for each outcome
| DASH | 2.08 | 6* | 0.082 |
| VAS | 0.15 | 3 | 0.891 |
| Extension | 0.27 | 3 | 0.802 |
| Flexion | 0.09 | 3 | 0.931 |
| Supination | 0.05 | 9* | 0.958 |
| Pronation | 0.70 | 9* | 0.500 |
| Radial deviation | 39.2 | 1 | 0.016 |
| Ulnar deviation | 9.29 | 1 | 0.068 |
| Grip strength | 0.64 | 1 | 0.637 |
| Pronation strength | 1.36 | 4* | 0.244 |
DASH Disability of Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand score, VAS visual analog scale
*Presented outcomes separately for AO type B and C fractures, which we counted as two studies