| Literature DB >> 33835226 |
Gian Andrea Lucidi1, Alberto Grassi2, Belal Bashar Hamdan Al-Zu'bi2, Luca Macchiarola2, Piero Agostinone2, Maurilio Marcacci3, Stefano Zaffagnini2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The aim of the study was to evaluate the long-term clinical results, reoperations, surgical failure and complications at a minimum of 20 year of follow-up of the first 8 medial CMI scaffolds implanted by a single surgeon during a pilot European Prospective study.Entities:
Keywords: CMI; Collagen meniscus implant; Long-term follow-up; Meniscus scaffold; Post-meniscectomy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33835226 PMCID: PMC8595163 DOI: 10.1007/s00167-021-06556-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc ISSN: 0942-2056 Impact factor: 4.342
Demographic and surgical characteristics, mean ± SD [range]
| Number of patients | 7 |
| Sex (M/F) | 7/0 |
| Age surgery (years) | 33.8 ± 8.9 [24.5–51.4] |
| Age follow-up (years) | 55.2 ± 8.9 [46.1–73.2] |
| Follow-up (years) | 21.3 ± 0.5 [20.3–21.7] |
| Previous surgery | 3 None; 2 MM; 2 MM + ACL-R |
| Acute/chronic | 3/4 |
| Defect size (mm) | 41.4 ± 17.0 [25.0–70.0] |
| Defect % | 66% ± 27% [35%–90%] |
| Scaffold size (mm) | 32.9 ± 4.9 [25.0–40.0] |
| Concomitant surgery | 4 None; 2 ACL-R; 1 Rev ACL-R + MFC mfx |
| Failures | 1 (TKA after 13 years) |
| Surgery during follow-up | 1 HTO; 1 hardware removal |
M male, F female, MM medial meniscectomy, ACL-R anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction, Rev revision, MFC medial femoral condyle, mfx microfractures, TKA total knee arthroplasty, HTO high tibial osteotomy
Fig. 1Arthroscopic images of a second look of the patient 7. This patient underwent partial medial meniscectomy 37 years ago at the age of 21. In 1999 the patient underwent ACL reconstruction combined with medial CMI implantation. During the surgery, a chondropathy grade II was already reported. There was evidence of mild cartilage degeneration at the last follow-up, while the CMI showed good integration with the host tissue and no tears were detected
Fig. 2Cincinnati Score and the VAS for pain of the single patients are shown in the figure. Note that the Cincinnati score decreases slowly from the last follow-up and the VAS slightly increases
Fig. 3Yulish score of patients whose MRI was available at 20 years of follow-up. Note that the three with a better score had a slight worsening, while the patient with the worst score was stable over time
Fig. 4Sagittal MRI of patients 3 at 20 years of follow-up. Note that the implant is still recognizable and showing a good signal with reduced scaffold size