Ding David Y, Prentice Heather A, Reyes Chelsea, Paxton Elizabeth W, Chen Foster, Maletis Gregory B
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, The Permanente Medical Group, San Francisco, California, USA.
Medical Device Surveillance & Assessment, Southern California Permanente Medical Group, San Diego, California, USA.
Am J Sports Med. 2025 Jul 7:3635465251352180. doi: 10.1177/03635465251352180.
Knee arthroplasty in patients who have undergone anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) has been associated with a high risk of infection, arthrofibrosis, and longer operative time due in part to difficulty with exposure and retained hardware. Patients who undergo ACLR are at a higher risk of undergoing knee arthroplasty and are at risk earlier than the general population. As patients with ACLR age and as ACLR surgery becomes more prevalent in the older athlete, the rates of knee arthroplasty after ACLR will only increase.
To determine the incidence of knee arthroplasty after ACLR, as well as identify patient and operative risk factors for knee arthroplasty after ACLR.
Cohort study; Level of evidence 3.
Data from Kaiser Permanente's ACLR Registry and Total Joint Replacement Registry were used to conduct a cohort study. Patients with primary ACLR were identified (2005-2022). Patient factors considered included age, body mass index (BMI), sex, race/ethnicity, smoking status, American Society of Anesthesiologists classification, activity at the time of injury, and medical comorbidities. Time from injury to ACLR, concomitant meniscal or chondral injuries, multiligament injury, graft type, and drilling technique were procedure factors evaluated. Postoperative factors included revision surgery, ipsilateral reoperation, and contralateral operation during follow-up. The outcome of interest was a subsequent knee arthroplasty. Patients were followed until the outcome of interest unless censored for membership disenrollment, death, or study end date (December 31, 2022). Multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression was used to determine factors associated with knee arthroplasty after ACLR using a value <.05 as the threshold for statistical significance.
The study sample included 52,222 primary ACLRs. The mean age was 28.6 years, and more patients were male (60.2%). The incidence of knee arthroplasty after ACLR was 1.60% at 15 years of follow-up. The mean age of patients undergoing knee arthroplasty after ACLR was 56 years, which was 12 years younger than the mean age of patients undergoing primary knee arthroplasty in general. Risk factors for knee arthroplasty included increasing age compared with those <40 years (40-49 years: hazard ratio [HR], 8.03 [95% CI, 4.83-13.34]; 50-59 years: HR, 18.24 [95% CI, 10.56-31.52]; ≥60 years: HR, 53.77 [95% CI, 26.24-110.22]), increasing BMI (HR, 1.07 [95% CI, 1.04-1.10]), female sex (HR, 1.60 [95% CI, 1.21-2.12]), trauma-associated anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury (HR, 1.71 [95% CI, 1.07-2.74]), a history of hypertension (HR, 1.69 [95% CI, 1.14-2.51]) or other neurological disorders at the time of ACLR (HR, 5.08 [95% CI, 2.15-12.02]), chondral injuries reported during the ACLR (HR, 1.43 [95% CI, 1.04-1.97]), and allograft selection (HR, 2.16 [95% CI, 1.17-4.00]). Revision surgery (HR, 2.19 [95% CI, 1.18-4.08]), ipsilateral reoperation (HR, 3.50 [95% CI, 2.43-5.05]), and contralateral surgery (HR, 4.06 [95% CI, 2.59-6.35]) during follow-up were risk factors for knee arthroplasty.
Increasing age was the strongest risk factor for subsequent knee arthroplasty in patients who have undergone prior ACLR. Patients should be counseled that undergoing ACLR with allograft had a 2 times higher risk of future knee arthroplasty compared with patellar tendon autograft. Additional independent risk factors identified included female sex, increasing BMI, a history of hypertension or other neurological disorders, trauma-related injury compared with sports injury, concomitant chondral injury, and revision surgery, ipsilateral reoperation, or contralateral surgery during follow-up.
前交叉韧带重建(ACLR)患者进行膝关节置换术时,感染、关节纤维化风险较高,且手术时间较长,部分原因是暴露困难和内植物留存。接受ACLR的患者进行膝关节置换术的风险更高,且比普通人群更早面临风险。随着ACLR患者年龄增长,以及ACLR手术在老年运动员中越来越普遍,ACLR后膝关节置换术的发生率只会增加。
确定ACLR后膝关节置换术的发生率,并识别ACLR后膝关节置换术的患者和手术风险因素。
队列研究;证据等级3。
利用凯撒医疗集团的ACLR登记处和全关节置换登记处的数据进行队列研究。确定原发性ACLR患者(2005 - 2022年)。考虑的患者因素包括年龄、体重指数(BMI)、性别、种族/族裔、吸烟状况、美国麻醉医师协会分级、受伤时的活动情况以及合并症。评估的手术因素包括从受伤到ACLR的时间、合并半月板或软骨损伤、多韧带损伤、移植物类型和钻孔技术。术后因素包括翻修手术、同侧再次手术以及随访期间的对侧手术。感兴趣的结局是随后的膝关节置换术。对患者进行随访,直至出现感兴趣的结局,除非因成员资格取消、死亡或研究结束日期(2022年12月31日)而被截尾。采用多变量Cox比例风险回归分析确定与ACLR后膝关节置换术相关的因素,以P值<0.05作为统计学显著性阈值。
研究样本包括52222例原发性ACLR。平均年龄为28.6岁,男性患者更多(60.2%)。随访15年时,ACLR后膝关节置换术的发生率为1.60%。ACLR后接受膝关节置换术的患者平均年龄为56岁,比一般原发性膝关节置换术患者的平均年龄小12岁。膝关节置换术的风险因素包括与年龄<40岁者相比年龄增加(40 - 49岁:风险比[HR],8.03[95%置信区间,4.83 - 13.34];50 - 59岁:HR,18.24[95%置信区间,10.56 - 31.52];≥60岁:HR,53.77[95%置信区间,26.24 - 110.22])、BMI增加(HR,1.07[95%置信区间,1.04 - 1.10])、女性(HR,1.60[95%置信区间,- 2.12])、创伤相关的前交叉韧带(ACL)损伤(HR,1.71[95%置信区间,1.07 - 2.74])、ACLR时的高血压病史(HR,1.69[95%置信区间,1.14 - 2.51])或其他神经系统疾病史(HR,5.08[95%置信区间,2.15 - 12.02])、ACLR期间报告的软骨损伤(HR,1.43[95%置信区间,1.04 - 1.97])以及同种异体移植物选择(HR,2. [95%置信区间,1.17 - 4.00])。随访期间的翻修手术(HR,2.19[95%置信区间,1.18 - 4.])、同侧再次手术(HR,3.50[95%置信区间,2.43 - 5.05])和对侧手术(HR,4.06[95%置信区间,2.59 - 6.35])是膝关节置换术的风险因素。
年龄增加是既往接受ACLR患者随后进行膝关节置换术的最强风险因素。应告知患者,与髌腱自体移植物相比,采用同种异体移植物进行ACLR后未来进行膝关节置换术的风险高出2倍。确定的其他独立风险因素包括女性、BMI增加、高血压或其他神经系统疾病史、与运动损伤相比的创伤相关损伤、合并软骨损伤以及随访期间的翻修手术、同侧再次手术或对侧手术。