| Literature DB >> 35615394 |
Benjamin J Shore1, James McCarthy2, M Wade Shrader3, H Kerr Graham4, Matthew Veerkamp2, Erich Rutz4, Henry Chambers5, Jon R Davids6, Unni Narayanan7, Tom F Novacheck8, Kristan Pierz9, Thomas Dreher10, Jason Rhodes11, Jeffery Shilt12, Tim Theologis13, Anja Van Campenhout14, Robert M Kay15.
Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to develop consensus for the surgical indications of anterior distal femur hemiepiphysiodesis in children with cerebral palsy using expert surgeon opinion through a modified Delphi technique.Entities:
Keywords: Cerebral palsy; anterior distal femur hemiepiphysiodesis; consensus; guided growth; knee flexion contracture; surgical indications; treatment
Year: 2022 PMID: 35615394 PMCID: PMC9124914 DOI: 10.1177/18632521221087529
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Child Orthop ISSN: 1863-2521 Impact factor: 1.917
Framework for support (if applicable to the patients).
| 1. The clinical problem we are addressing (or preventing), and the benefit that this will translate into for the patient (intended outcome). |
| 2. Features of the clinical history/symptoms that will point to the clinical problem above, including Gross Motor Function Classification System and age. |
| 3. The physical examination finding(s) that support the decision: |
| a. Observed gait deviation. |
| b. Static (on table) exam. |
| 4. The imaging findings (where applicable) to support the decision. |
| 5. The video and/or three-dimensional gait analysis findings (where applicable) that support (or suggest avoiding) the procedure. |
| 6. The intraoperative examination under anesthesia that supports (or suggests avoiding) the procedure. |
| 7. Important outcome measures. |
Statement for consensus regarding anterior distal femur hemiepiphysiodesis.
| General characteristics: |
ADFH: anterior distal femoral hemiepiphysiodesis; GMFCS: Gross Motor Function Classification System; CP: cerebral palsy; KFC: knee flexion contracture; PTA: patellar tendon advancement; PTS: patella tendon shortening.
Results of consensus for anterior distal femoral hemiepiphysiodesis (ADFH) statements.
| Statement | Consensus for statement (% agree) | General agreement for statement (% agree) | No consensus (% agree, % neutral, % disagree) | General disagreement against statement (% disagree) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. ADFH is indicated in ambulatory patients (GMFCS I–III). | X (94%) | |||
| 2. ADFH is not indicated in non-ambulatory patients with CP. | X (69%) | |||
| 3. ADFH is indicated in non-ambulatory patients (GMFCS IV and V). | X (60%) | |||
| 4. ADFH can be indicated in non-ambulatory patients with GMFCS IV CP in an effort to help with standing and transfers. | X (100%) | |||
| 5. ADFH can be performed if the patient has at least 2 years of growth remaining (by whatever measure of skeletal maturity you use). | X (94%) | |||
| 6. ADFH can be performed if the patient has at least 1 year of growth remaining (by whatever measure of skeletal maturity you use). | X (60%) | |||
| 7. ADFH is rarely indicated in children <10 years old. | X (56%, 13%, 31%) | |||
| 8. ADFH (guided growth) is indicated for small KFCs <10 degrees. | X (56%, 25%, 19%) | |||
| 9. ADFH distal (guided growth) is indicated for KFCs 10–20 degrees. | X (94%) | |||
| 10. ADFH (guided growth) is indicated for KFCs 20–30 degrees. | X (50%, 25%, 25%) | |||
| 11. ADFH (guided growth) is indicated for large KFCs >30 degrees. | X (60%) | |||
| 12. ADFH (guided growth) (ADFH) is less effective for large KFCs >30 degrees unless supplemented with additional treatments. | X (94%) | |||
| 13. ADFH (Guided growth) is only indicated if the patient has a KFC regardless of other indications. | X (63%) | |||
| 14. There is no indication for an ADFH (guided growth) unless the patient has a KFC at the time of surgery. | X (88%) | |||
| 15. After any form of ADFH/guided growth, ongoing clinical/radiological follow-up, to skeletal maturity is essential, to monitor correction and to detect unintended coronal plane deformities. | X (100%) | |||
| 16. Crouch gait on observation gait assessment is one indication for ADFH (guided growth). | X (63%) | |||
| 17. Recurrent knee flexion contracture after distal femoral extension osteotomy may be an indication for ADFH. | X (81%) | |||
| 18. Excessive knee flexion in stance on 3D motion analysis is one indication for ADFH (guided growth). | X (69%) | |||
| 19. ADFH (guided growth) is indicated in patients with excessive knee flexion in stance on 3D motion analysis general agreement. | X (69%) | |||
| 20. A PTA/PTS can be performed at the time of ADFH if there is an extension lag. | X (81%) | |||
| 21. A PTA/PTS should not be performed at the time of ADFH. | X (63%) | |||
| 22. A PTA/PTS can be performed at the time of ADFH even if there is not an extension lag. | X (19%, 38%, 43%) | |||
| 23. In a patient with a KFC undergoing ADFH, I will wait to perform a PTA/PTS until the KFC is corrected. | X (69%) | |||
| 24. In a patient with KFC undergoing ADFH, I will perform a PTA/PTS if indicated at the same time. | X (13%, 38%, 50%) | |||
| 25. I prefer the use of plates for ADFH (guided growth). | X (60%) | |||
| 26. I prefer the use of screws for ADFH (guided growth). | X (60%) | |||
| 27. Plate/screw constructs often cause more pain than screws only constructs following anterior distal femoral hemiepiphysiodesis. | X (75%) |
ADFH: anterior distal femoral hemiepiphysiodesis; GMFCS: Gross Motor Function Classification System; CP: cerebral palsy; KFC: knee flexion contracture; PTA: patellar tendon advancement; PTS: patella tendon shortening.
Figure 1.(a) Pre-operative (left) and post-operative (right) sagittal kinematics of a 10-year-old boy with severe crouch gait, GMFCS level II at the time of surgery, and FMS 5,5,1. He has severe crouch gait, marked lower limb weakness and asymmetric knee flexion contractures: 17 degrees on the left side (red lines) and 3 degrees on the right side (blue lines). He was considered a poor candidate for DFEO/PTA because of weakness and poor balance. He had bilateral SEMLS which included bilateral transfer of semitendinosus to the adductor tubercle, medial hamstring lengthening, and combined ADFH with screws for the left knee. At 12 months after SEMLS and rehabilitation, stance phase knee kinematics have improved as have ankle, hip, and pelvis kinematics. Gait Profile Score improved from 16.8 to 11.9 degrees. FMS improved from 5,5,1 to 5,5,5, meaning he regained independent ambulation in the community. ADFH can be incorporated into SEMLS to address knee flexion deformity or used as a stand along intervention when appropriate. (b) Pre- and post-operative radiographs of the left knee demonstrate the expected physeal changes seen with anterior tethering of the distal femoral physis prior to screw removal and bending of the screws illustrating the strength of distal femoral physis.