Sardana Vandit, Philippon Marc J, de Sa Darren, Bedi Asheesh, Ye Lily, Simunovic Nicole, Ayeni Olufemi R
Division of Orthopaedic Surgery, Department of Surgery, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Steadman Philippon Research Institute, Vail, Colorado.
Arthroscopy. 2015 Oct;31(10):2047-55. doi: 10.1016/j.arthro.2015.03.039. Epub 2015 May 29.
To identify the indications and outcomes in patients undergoing revision hip arthroscopy.
The electronic databases Embase, Medline, HealthStar, and PubMed were searched from 1946 to July 19, 2014. Two blinded reviewers searched, screened, and evaluated the data quality of the studies using the Methodological Index for Non-Randomized Studies scale. Data were abstracted in duplicate. Agreement and descriptive statistics are presented.
Six studies were included (3 prospective case series and 3 retrospective chart reviews), with a total of 448 hips examined. The most common indications for revision hip arthroscopy included residual femoroacetabular impingement (FAI), labral tears, and chondral lesions. The mean interval between revision arthroscopy and the index procedure was 25.6 months. Overall, the modified Harris Hip Score improved by a mean of 33.6% (19.3 points) from the baseline score at 1-year follow-up. In 14.6% of patients, further surgical procedures were required, including re-revision hip arthroscopy (8.0%), total hip replacement (5.6%), and hip resurfacing (1.0%). Female patients more commonly underwent revision hip arthroscopy (59.7%).
The current evidence examined in this review supports revision hip arthroscopy as a successful intervention to improve functional outcomes (modified Harris Hip Score) and relieve pain in patients with residual symptoms after primary FAI surgery, although the outcomes are inferior when compared with a matched cohort of patients undergoing primary hip arthroscopy for FAI. The main indication for revision is a candidate who has symptoms due to residual cam- or pincer-type deformity that was either unaddressed or under-resected during the index operation. However, it is important to consider that the studies included in this review are of low-quality evidence. Surgeons should consider incorporating a minimum 2-year follow-up for individuals after index hip-preservation surgery because revisions tended to occur within this time frame.
Level IV, systematic review of Level III and IV studies.
确定接受髋关节翻修关节镜手术患者的适应症及手术效果。
检索1946年至2014年7月19日期间的电子数据库Embase、Medline、HealthStar和PubMed。两名盲法评审员使用非随机研究方法学指数量表对研究的数据质量进行检索、筛选和评估。数据采用双份提取。呈现一致性和描述性统计结果。
纳入6项研究(3项前瞻性病例系列研究和3项回顾性病历审查),共检查了448个髋关节。髋关节翻修关节镜手术最常见的适应症包括残留股骨髋臼撞击症(FAI)、盂唇撕裂和软骨损伤。翻修关节镜手术与初次手术之间的平均间隔时间为25.6个月。总体而言,在1年随访时,改良Harris髋关节评分较基线评分平均提高了33.6%(19.3分)。14.6%的患者需要进一步手术,包括再次髋关节翻修关节镜手术(8.0%)、全髋关节置换术(5.6%)和髋关节表面置换术(1.0%)。女性患者更常接受髋关节翻修关节镜手术(59.7%)。
本综述中审查的当前证据支持髋关节翻修关节镜手术作为一种成功的干预措施,可改善初次FAI手术后仍有残留症状患者的功能结局(改良Harris髋关节评分)并缓解疼痛。尽管与接受初次髋关节镜手术治疗FAI的匹配队列患者相比,其手术效果较差。翻修的主要适应症是那些因初次手术时未处理或切除不充分而残留凸轮或钳夹型畸形导致出现症状的患者。然而,重要且需考虑的是,本综述中纳入的研究证据质量较低。外科医生应考虑对接受初次保髋手术后的患者进行至少2年的随访,因为翻修往往发生在这个时间段内。
IV级,III级和IV级研究系统评价。