Herring John A, Kim Harry K W, Jo Chanhee, Hadden William J
Texas Scottish Rite Hospital for Children, Dallas, Texas.
J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2025 Jul 29;107(17):1957-1966. doi: 10.2106/JBJS.24.00471.
We revaluated the radiographic results of a 2004 landmark, multicenter prospective study of patients with Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease (LCP). In the current study, we developed a new classification to evaluate the femoral head, acetabulum, and greater trochanter in the hips of patients with LCP, to address what we found to be deficiencies in the Stulberg rating system, which is based mainly on femoral head shape.
We digitized and analyzed approximately 5,000 radiographs and related data sheets of 337 patients (345 hips) with LCP from the 2004 study. We found many unexpected abnormalities, including serious lesions of the femoral head, that had not been noted in that study. To record our findings in the femoral head, acetabulum, and greater trochanter, we developed a classification system that we termed the HAT (Head, Acetabulum, Trochanter) classification, which assigns the femoral head 1 to 5 points, the acetabulum 1 point if dysplastic, and the greater trochanter 1 point if elevated to or above the femoral head. The sum is the HAT score, which we compared with the Stulberg score, other predictive factors, and the Nonarthritic Hip Score (NAHS) from two 20-year follow-up studies of a number of patients from the 2004 study.
The intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) of the HAT score was 0.93 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.90 to 0.95), and the total HAT score correlated strongly with the NAHS. Forty-nine percent of all hips had acetabular dysplasia, which correlated with a worse NAHS. A HAT of ≤3 was considered a good result. The odds of a patient developing acetabular dysplasia at skeletal maturity were lower after surgical treatment than after nonoperative treatment. In addition, surgically treated patients had better HAT scores than nonoperatively treated patients, especially if their skeletal age was ≥6 years at LCP onset. Better outcomes were also associated with a favorable lateral pillar classification, a younger skeletal at onset, and male sex.
The HAT classification is reproducible and allows a more comprehensive analysis of the radiographic outcomes of LCP. The system is flexible and would allow for different measures of its 3 components in future studies.
Prognostic Level III . See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.
我们重新评估了2004年一项具有里程碑意义的关于Legg-Calvé-Perthes病(LCP)患者的多中心前瞻性研究的影像学结果。在当前研究中,我们开发了一种新的分类方法来评估LCP患者髋关节的股骨头、髋臼和大转子,以解决我们发现的主要基于股骨头形状的Stulberg评分系统的不足之处。
我们对2004年研究中337例(345髋)LCP患者的约5000张X光片及相关数据表进行了数字化处理和分析。我们发现了许多未在该研究中被注意到的意外异常情况,包括股骨头的严重病变。为了记录我们在股骨头、髋臼和大转子方面的发现,我们开发了一种分类系统,我们称之为HAT(头、髋臼、转子)分类,该分类给股骨头1至5分,髋臼发育不良时为1分,大转子升高至或高于股骨头时为1分。总分即为HAT评分,我们将其与Stulberg评分、其他预测因素以及来自对2004年研究中一些患者进行的两项20年随访研究的非关节炎髋关节评分(NAHS)进行了比较。
HAT评分的组内相关系数(ICC)为0.93(95%置信区间[CI]:0.90至0.95),HAT总分与NAHS密切相关。所有髋关节中有49%存在髋臼发育不良,这与较差的NAHS相关。HAT评分≤3被认为是良好结果。手术治疗后患者骨骼成熟时发生髋臼发育不良的几率低于非手术治疗后。此外,手术治疗的患者比非手术治疗的患者有更好的HAT评分,尤其是在LCP发病时骨骼年龄≥6岁的患者。更好的结果还与有利的外侧柱分类、发病时较年轻的骨骼年龄以及男性性别相关。
HAT分类具有可重复性,能够对LCP的影像学结果进行更全面的分析。该系统具有灵活性,在未来研究中允许对其三个组成部分采用不同的测量方法。
预后水平III。有关证据水平的完整描述,请参阅作者指南。