| Literature DB >> 35542316 |
Ramez Ailabouni1, Bryn O Zomar2,3, Bronwyn L Slobogean4, Emily K Schaeffer2,3, Benjamin Joseph5, Kishore Mulpuri2,3.
Abstract
Background: The purpose of this study was to examine the evolution of Legg-Calvé-Perthes' disease (LCPD) among children from British Columbia (BC), Canada who were treated non-operatively and to compare the results to a previously conducted study in India.Entities:
Keywords: Legg–Calvé–Perthes’; Natural history; Non-operative treatment; Pediatric hip; Perthes disease
Year: 2022 PMID: 35542316 PMCID: PMC9043051 DOI: 10.1007/s43465-021-00543-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Orthop ISSN: 0019-5413 Impact factor: 1.033
Patient demographics of the British Columbia and India cohorts
| Demographic | British Columbia | India2 |
|---|---|---|
| ( | ( | |
| Age at presentation (95% CI), years | 6.8 (6.4, 7.3) | N/A |
| Male | 6.9 (6.4, 7.4) | 9.1 (6.2, 12.0) |
| Female | 6.5 (5.6, 7.5) | 8.5 (4.9, 12.1) |
| Age at onset of symptoms (95% CI), years | 6.2 (5.7, 6.7) | N/A |
| Sex, | ||
| Male | 70 (78) | 438 (72) |
| Female | 20 (22) | 172 (28) |
| Affected hip, | ||
| Unilateral | 79 (88) | 589 (96) |
| Left | 37 (41) | N/A |
| Right | 42 (47) | N/A |
| Bilateral | 11 (12) | 21 (4) |
Intra- and interobserver reliability of the modified Waldenstrom, Herring, Salter-Thompson and Catterall classification systems
| Classification | Sample Size | Intraobserver | Interobserver | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Observed Agreement | Kappa | Observed Agreement | Kappa | ||
| Modified Waldenstrom | 100 | 72% | 0.67 (0.59, 0.75) | 80% | 0.76 (0.67, 0.85) |
| Herring | 27 | 89% | 0.65 (0.34, 0.96) | 86% | 0.62 (0.27, 0.98) |
| Salter–Thompson | 22 | 41% | 0.07 (− 0.12, 0.27) | 46% | 0.24 (0.01, 0.48) |
| Catterall | 54 | 48% | 0.10 (− 0.02, 0.22) | 74% | 0.41 (0.17, 0.64) |
*n number of hips that could be appropriately classified based on disease stage
Fig. 1Mean percentage metaphyseal widening with 95% confidence intervals through the disease stages between British Columbia and India2 with sample sizes
Fig. 2Mean percentage epiphyseal extrusion with 95% confidence intervals through the disease stages between British Columbia and India2 with sample sizes
Frequency of epiphyseal extrusion over 20%
| Stage | BC | India2 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample Size | Sample Size | |||
| Ia | 3 | 1 (33) | 30 | 6 (20) |
| Ib | 30 | 11 (37) | 142 | 41 (29) |
| IIa | 34 | 17 (50) | 155 | 55 (35) |
| IIb | 55 | 31 (56) | 147 | 66 (45) |
| IIIa | 70 | 49 (70) | 176 | 124 (70) |
| IIIb | 69 | 48 (70) | 116 | 85 (72) |
Classification of cases according to Catterall, Salter–Thompson, Herring, Mose and Stulberg in British Columbia and India
| Classification system | British Columbia | India2 |
|---|---|---|
| Catterall system (total) | 75 (60) | 469 (77) |
| I | 2 (3) | 0 |
| I I | 3 (4) | 30 (6) |
| III | 10 (13) | 232 (50) |
| IV | 60 (80) | 207 (44) |
| Salter–Thompson (total) | 36 (29) | 118 (19) |
| A | 19 (53) | 30 (25) |
| B | 14 (39) | 88 (75) |
| Herring (total) | 74 (59) | 360 (59) |
| A | 0 | 76 (21) |
| B | 8 (11) | 130 (36) |
| C | 66 (89) | 154 (43) |
| Mose (total) | 58 (46) | 80 (13) |
| Spherical (good) | 13 (22) | 19 (24) |
| Flattened (gair) | 20 (34) | 19 (24) |
| Irregular (poor) | 25 (43) | 42 (52) |
| Stulberg (total) | 58 (46) | N/A |
| Spherical congruency (I and II)* | 13 (22) | N/A |
| Aspherical congruency (III and IV)** | 45 (78) | N/A |
| Aspherical incongruency (V) | 0 | N/A |
*There were no hips in class I
**There were 25 hips in class III and 20 hips in class IV