Prevailing disagreement in the treatment of complex patellar instability cases: an online expert survey of the AGA Knee-Patellofemoral Committee.

Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc

Orthopädie und Sportchirurgie Dr. Dirisamer/Dr. Patsch, Schloss Puchenau, Karl-Leitl-Str. 1, 4048, Linz-Puchenau, Austria.

Published: August 2020

Purpose: To evaluate the current state of knowledge and potential controversies in the treatment of patellofemoral instability among orthopaedic/trauma surgeons in the German-speaking countries.

Methods: An online survey consisting of 32 questions and three fictitious cases was sent to members of the AGA-Society for Arthroscopy and Joint Surgery. Surgeons were defined by our senior authors as high-volume or low-volume surgeons, depending on the number of their cases. The treatment of 25% of patients with patellofemoral instability and/or the performance of 50 patellofemoral instability cases per year distinguishes high- from low-volume surgeons in this study.

Results: The online questionnaire was completed by 541 experienced knee surgeons from Germany (78%), Austria (10.9%), Switzerland (10.4%) and other countries (0.7%). Most surgeons prefer MPFL reconstruction as surgical intervention in patients with recurrent patellar instability (64-81%). Sixty percent of high-volume surgeons as compared to 21.8% of low-volume surgeons have ever performed a trochleoplasty. Of the overall respondents, 25% would not perform any surgical treatment on adolescents with patellar instability and an open growth plate. Of all responding surgeons, 95% would not treat patellofemoral instability with an isolated lateral release. This corresponds to recent literature showing poor outcome of its strictly isolated application.

Conclusion: This study provides an overview of the current management of acute and recurrent patellofemoral instability in the German-speaking countries. Results show the surgeons' awareness for highly demanding surgical possibilities for complex patellar instability cases. However, disagreement among surgeons still prevails when it comes to selecting individual multimodal treatment options. This highlights the need for treatment guidelines and algorithms for patellofemoral instability.

Level Of Evidence: V.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00167-020-05936-3DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

patellofemoral instability
20
patellar instability
16
instability cases
12
low-volume surgeons
12
surgeons
10
instability
9
complex patellar
8
treatment
6
patellofemoral
6
cases
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!