Cargando…

The Schulthess local Shoulder Arthroplasty Registry (SAR): cohort profile

PURPOSE: Clinical registries are essential for evaluation of surgical outcomes. The Schulthess Shoulder Arthroplasty Registry (SAR) was established in 2006 to evaluate safety, function, quality-of-life and patient satisfaction in patients undergoing shoulder arthroplasty. PARTICIPANTS: Adult patient...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Marzel, Alex, Schwyzer, Hans-Kaspar, Kolling, Christoph, Moro, Fabrizio, Flury, Matthias, Glanzmann, Michael C, Jung, Christian, Wirth, Barbara, Weber, Beatrice, Simmen, Beat, Scheibel, Markus, Audigé, Laurent
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7692837/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33243805
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2020-040591
_version_ 1783614605259440128
author Marzel, Alex
Schwyzer, Hans-Kaspar
Kolling, Christoph
Moro, Fabrizio
Flury, Matthias
Glanzmann, Michael C
Jung, Christian
Wirth, Barbara
Weber, Beatrice
Simmen, Beat
Scheibel, Markus
Audigé, Laurent
author_facet Marzel, Alex
Schwyzer, Hans-Kaspar
Kolling, Christoph
Moro, Fabrizio
Flury, Matthias
Glanzmann, Michael C
Jung, Christian
Wirth, Barbara
Weber, Beatrice
Simmen, Beat
Scheibel, Markus
Audigé, Laurent
author_sort Marzel, Alex
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: Clinical registries are essential for evaluation of surgical outcomes. The Schulthess Shoulder Arthroplasty Registry (SAR) was established in 2006 to evaluate safety, function, quality-of-life and patient satisfaction in patients undergoing shoulder arthroplasty. PARTICIPANTS: Adult patients undergoing anatomic or reverse shoulder joint replacement at the Schulthess Klinik, a high-volume, leading orthopaedic surgery centre in Zürich, Switzerland. FINDINGS TO DATE: Between March 2006 and December 2019, the registry covered 98% of eligible operations. Overall, 2332 patients were enrolled with a total of 2796 operations and 11 147 person-years of follow-up. Mean age at baseline was 71 (range: 20–95), 65% were women. Most common indication was rotator cuff tears with osteoarthritis (42%) and the mean preoperative Constant Score was 31 (±15). The most frequent arthroplasty type was reverse, increasing from 61% in 2006–2010 to 86% in 2015–2019. Functional recovery peaked at 12-month postoperatively and did not show a clinically relevant deterioration during the first ten follow-up years. Since its establishment, the registry was used to address multiple pertinent clinical and methodological questions. Primary focus was on comparing different implant configurations (eg, glenosphere diameter) and surgical techniques (eg, latissimus dorsi transfer) to maximise functional recovery. Additionally, the cohort contributed to the determination of the clinical relevance and validity of radiological monitoring of cortical bone resorption and scapular notching. Finally, SAR data helped to demonstrate that returning to sports was among key patient expectations after reverse shoulder arthroplasty. FUTURE PLANS: As first patients are approaching the 15 years follow-up landmark, the registry will continue providing essential data on long-term functional outcomes, implant stability, revision rates and aetiologies as well as patient satisfaction and quality-of-life. In addition to research and quality-control, the cohort data will be brought back to the patients by bolstering real-time clinical decision support.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7692837
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-76928372020-12-09 The Schulthess local Shoulder Arthroplasty Registry (SAR): cohort profile Marzel, Alex Schwyzer, Hans-Kaspar Kolling, Christoph Moro, Fabrizio Flury, Matthias Glanzmann, Michael C Jung, Christian Wirth, Barbara Weber, Beatrice Simmen, Beat Scheibel, Markus Audigé, Laurent BMJ Open Surgery PURPOSE: Clinical registries are essential for evaluation of surgical outcomes. The Schulthess Shoulder Arthroplasty Registry (SAR) was established in 2006 to evaluate safety, function, quality-of-life and patient satisfaction in patients undergoing shoulder arthroplasty. PARTICIPANTS: Adult patients undergoing anatomic or reverse shoulder joint replacement at the Schulthess Klinik, a high-volume, leading orthopaedic surgery centre in Zürich, Switzerland. FINDINGS TO DATE: Between March 2006 and December 2019, the registry covered 98% of eligible operations. Overall, 2332 patients were enrolled with a total of 2796 operations and 11 147 person-years of follow-up. Mean age at baseline was 71 (range: 20–95), 65% were women. Most common indication was rotator cuff tears with osteoarthritis (42%) and the mean preoperative Constant Score was 31 (±15). The most frequent arthroplasty type was reverse, increasing from 61% in 2006–2010 to 86% in 2015–2019. Functional recovery peaked at 12-month postoperatively and did not show a clinically relevant deterioration during the first ten follow-up years. Since its establishment, the registry was used to address multiple pertinent clinical and methodological questions. Primary focus was on comparing different implant configurations (eg, glenosphere diameter) and surgical techniques (eg, latissimus dorsi transfer) to maximise functional recovery. Additionally, the cohort contributed to the determination of the clinical relevance and validity of radiological monitoring of cortical bone resorption and scapular notching. Finally, SAR data helped to demonstrate that returning to sports was among key patient expectations after reverse shoulder arthroplasty. FUTURE PLANS: As first patients are approaching the 15 years follow-up landmark, the registry will continue providing essential data on long-term functional outcomes, implant stability, revision rates and aetiologies as well as patient satisfaction and quality-of-life. In addition to research and quality-control, the cohort data will be brought back to the patients by bolstering real-time clinical decision support. BMJ Publishing Group 2020-11-26 /pmc/articles/PMC7692837/ /pubmed/33243805 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2020-040591 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.
spellingShingle Surgery
Marzel, Alex
Schwyzer, Hans-Kaspar
Kolling, Christoph
Moro, Fabrizio
Flury, Matthias
Glanzmann, Michael C
Jung, Christian
Wirth, Barbara
Weber, Beatrice
Simmen, Beat
Scheibel, Markus
Audigé, Laurent
The Schulthess local Shoulder Arthroplasty Registry (SAR): cohort profile
title The Schulthess local Shoulder Arthroplasty Registry (SAR): cohort profile
title_full The Schulthess local Shoulder Arthroplasty Registry (SAR): cohort profile
title_fullStr The Schulthess local Shoulder Arthroplasty Registry (SAR): cohort profile
title_full_unstemmed The Schulthess local Shoulder Arthroplasty Registry (SAR): cohort profile
title_short The Schulthess local Shoulder Arthroplasty Registry (SAR): cohort profile
title_sort schulthess local shoulder arthroplasty registry (sar): cohort profile
topic Surgery
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7692837/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33243805
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2020-040591
work_keys_str_mv AT marzelalex theschulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT schwyzerhanskaspar theschulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT kollingchristoph theschulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT morofabrizio theschulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT flurymatthias theschulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT glanzmannmichaelc theschulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT jungchristian theschulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT wirthbarbara theschulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT weberbeatrice theschulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT simmenbeat theschulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT scheibelmarkus theschulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT audigelaurent theschulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT marzelalex schulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT schwyzerhanskaspar schulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT kollingchristoph schulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT morofabrizio schulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT flurymatthias schulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT glanzmannmichaelc schulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT jungchristian schulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT wirthbarbara schulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT weberbeatrice schulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT simmenbeat schulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT scheibelmarkus schulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile
AT audigelaurent schulthesslocalshoulderarthroplastyregistrysarcohortprofile