Puzzitiello Richard N, Agarwalla Avinesh, Masood Raisa, Bragg Jack, Hanna John, Pagani Nicholas R, Salzler Matthew J
Department of Orthopaedics, Tufts Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A.
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Westchester Medical Center, Valhalla, New York, U.S.A.
Arthroscopy. 2024 Mar;40(3):972-980. doi: 10.1016/j.arthro.2023.05.038. Epub 2023 Jul 11.
To compare complication rates, reoperation rates, and subjective outcomes after arthroscopic and open irrigation and debridement for treatment of native knee septic arthritis.
Following The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses guidelines, a systematic review of the Embase, Cochrane, and PubMed databases was performed. Comparative studies reporting clinical outcomes after arthroscopic versus open treatment for septic arthritis of the native knee in human adults were included. Excluded were case series with <10 patients, inclusion of patients <18 years old, studies on non-native joints, abstract-only publications, and studies without stratification of the involved joint. Two reviewers in duplicate independently performed search and data extraction. The quality of the included studies was assessed with the Methodological Index for Non-Randomized Studies instrument. The mean score among the included studies was 18.2 (range 16-23).
Eleven studies were included, comprising 2,343 knees treated arthroscopically, and 1,595 treated with arthrotomy. Studies reported no differences in erythrocyte sedimentation rate, C-reactive protein, peripheral white blood cells, or symptom chronicity between groups. Nine studies (81.8%) attempted to control for potentially confounding variables in their analyses, and 4 studies (36.4%) reported significant differences in patient characteristics. Reoperation rates ranged from 0% to 50% for arthroscopy and 6% to 71% for arthrotomy. Complication rates ranged from 0% to 39.4% arthroscopically and 0% to 49% for arthrotomy. Superior patient-reported outcomes were achieved after arthroscopy in 2 studies that analyzed subjective outcomes.
Arthroscopic management of native knee septic arthritis is a safe and effective alternative to open treatment and is associated with comparable complication rates, reoperation rates, hospitalization lengths, readmission rates, and superior patient-reported outcomes compared with open irrigation and debridement.
Level IV, systematic review of Level I, III, and IV studies.
比较关节镜下与切开冲洗清创治疗原发性膝关节化脓性关节炎后的并发症发生率、再次手术率及主观疗效。
按照系统评价和Meta分析的首选报告项目指南,对Embase、Cochrane和PubMed数据库进行系统评价。纳入比较成人原发性膝关节化脓性关节炎关节镜治疗与切开治疗后临床疗效的对照研究。排除患者人数少于10例的病例系列、纳入18岁以下患者的研究、非原发性关节的研究、仅为摘要的出版物以及未对受累关节进行分层的研究。两名审阅者独立重复进行检索和数据提取。采用非随机研究方法学指数工具评估纳入研究的质量。纳入研究的平均评分为18.2(范围16 - 23)。
纳入11项研究,其中2343例膝关节接受关节镜治疗,1595例接受切开手术治疗。研究报告两组间红细胞沉降率、C反应蛋白、外周血白细胞或症状慢性程度无差异。9项研究(81.8%)在分析中试图控制潜在的混杂变量,4项研究(36.4%)报告患者特征存在显著差异。关节镜手术的再次手术率为0%至50%,切开手术为6%至71%。关节镜手术的并发症发生率为0%至39.4%,切开手术为0%至49%。在2项分析主观疗效的研究中,关节镜治疗后患者报告的疗效更佳。
与切开冲洗清创相比,关节镜治疗原发性膝关节化脓性关节炎是一种安全有效的替代方法,并发症发生率、再次手术率、住院时间、再入院率相当,且患者报告的疗效更佳。
IV级,对I级、III级和IV级研究的系统评价。