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Patient demographic and surgical characteristics in anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction: a description of registries from six countries

Authors :
Fares S. Haddad
Magnus Forssblad
Tadashi T. Funahashi
Andreas Persson
Jon Karlsson
Caroline Mouton
Romain Seil
Kristian Samuelsson
Martin Lind
Liz Paxton
Gregory B. Maletis
Lars Engebretsen
Ayman Gabr
Tim Spalding
Henrik Magnusson
Heather A. Prentice
Source :
Prentice, H A, Lind, M, Mouton, C, Persson, A, Magnusson, H, Gabr, A, Seil, R, Engebretsen, L, Samuelsson, K, Karlsson, J, Forssblad, M, Haddad, F S, Spalding, T, Funahashi, T T, Paxton, L W & Maletis, G B 2018, ' Patient demographic and surgical characteristics in anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction : A description of registries from six countries ', British Journal of Sports Medicine, vol. 52, no. 11, pp. 716-722 . https://doi.org/10.1136/bjsports-2017-098674
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
BMJ, 2018.

Abstract

ObjectiveFindings from individual anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) registry studies are impactful, but how various registries from different countries compare with different patient populations and surgical techniques has not been described. We sought to describe six ACLR registry cohorts to understand variation across countries.MethodsFive European registries and one US registry participated. For each registry, all primary ACLR registered between registry establishment through 31December 2014 were identified. Descriptive statistics included frequencies, proportions, medians and IQRs. Revision incidence rates following primary ACLR were computed.Results101 125 ACLR were included: 21 820 in Denmark, 300 in Luxembourg, 17 556 in Norway, 30 422 in Sweden, 2972 in the UK and 28 055 in the US. In all six cohorts, males (range: 56.8%–72.4%) and soccer injuries (range: 14.1%–42.3%) were most common. European countries mostly used autografts (range: 93.7%–99.7%); allograft was most common in the US (39.9%). Interference screw was the most frequent femoral fixation in Luxembourg and the US (84.8% and 42.9%), and suspensory fixation was more frequent in the other countries (range: 43.9%–75.5%). Interference was the most frequent tibial fixation type in all six cohorts (range: 64.8%–98.2%). Three-year cumulative revision probabilities ranged from 2.8% to 3.7%.ConclusionsSimilarities in patient demographics and injury activity were observed between all cohorts of ACLR. However, graft and fixation choices differed. Revision rates were low. This work, including >100 000 ACLR, is the most comprehensive international description of contemporary practice to date.

Details

ISSN :
14730480 and 03063674
Volume :
52
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British Journal of Sports Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4a72e0b9273f61f5ed7b76de6077b19c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bjsports-2017-098674