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COMPARISON OF BONE-PATELLA TENDON-BONE (BTB) AND QUADRICEPS AUTOGRAFT FOR ACL RECONSTRUCTION IN PATIENTS UNDER 18 YEARS OF AGE

BACKGROUND: Graft choice for ACL reconstruction in patients under 18 years old remains controversial. BTB autograft has long been considered for young athletes who are at or near skeletal maturity. Quadriceps autograft has emerged as an alternative graft choice in the young patient population. Howev...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sherman, Seth L., Hogan, Daniel W., Geeslin, Derek W., Rund, Joseph M., Burch, M. Benjamin, Ma, Richard, Gray, Aaron D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7225818/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967120S00278
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND: Graft choice for ACL reconstruction in patients under 18 years old remains controversial. BTB autograft has long been considered for young athletes who are at or near skeletal maturity. Quadriceps autograft has emerged as an alternative graft choice in the young patient population. However, there remains a paucity of comparative outcomes. HYPOTHESIS/PURPOSE: Our purpose is to compare subjective outcomes and complications of ACL reconstruction in patients under 18 years old using either BTB or quadriceps autograft. Our hypothesis is that there will be no difference in subjective outcome or complication between groups. METHODS: Following IRB approval, retrospective review of prospectively collected data identified consecutive cohorts of patients under 18 years old undergoing ACL reconstruction with either BTB or quadriceps autograft. Surgery was performed by a single sports fellowship trained surgeon between 2011-2019. Patients undergoing concomitant osteotomies, cartilage restoration, and other ligament reconstruction procedures were excluded. Pre- and post-surgical patient reported outcomes (PROs) including IKDC, KOOS, PROMIS, SANE, Tegner, and Marx were compared between groups. Complications requiring re-operation (i.e., infection, stiffness, reconstruction failure) were recorded. Results were analyzed statistically. RESULTS: 71 patients met inclusion criteria. There were 41 BTB and 30 quadriceps autografts. Mean age was 16.5 years in the BTB group and 14.5 in the quadriceps group (p=0.0000006). 27 of 41 (66%) BTB and 13 of 30 (43%) quadriceps were female. There were no significant differences in PROs between groups. At minimum 6-month follow-up (range 6-25.7 months), patients in both quadriceps and BTB autograft cohorts reported statistically significant improvements in IKDC scores (31.10%, p=0.0009; 34.25%, p=0.00000008), all KOOS domains, SANE (41.80%, p=0.0000006; 42.42%, p=0.000000002), and Tegner scores (2.99%, p=0.0002; 3.35%, p=0.000004). Post-operative PROs were not significantly different between groups (p>0.05). Complications were low and not significant between groups. Both quadriceps and BTB autograft cohorts required 3 post-operative re-operations (10% and 7%, p=0.7), each group including 2 revision reconstructions (7% and 5%, p=0.8) and 1 procedure for stiffness (3% and 2%, p=0.8). CONCLUSION: For ACL reconstruction in patients under 18 years old, both BTB and quadriceps autografts demonstrated significant subjective improvements and low rates of complications requiring re-operation. Quadriceps autograft appears to be a safe and effective alternative to BTB autograft in this challenging patient population.