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Prospects of Long Term Relapse after Management of Pediatric Clubfoot with the Ponseti Method: A Systematic Review

CATEGORY: Other; Ankle; Hindfoot; Midfoot/Forefoot INTRODUCTION/PURPOSE: The Ponseti method of serial casting has been recognized as the gold standard for management of idiopathic clubfoot, a very common congenital foot deformity. While the short to midterm success of the method has been widely conf...

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Autores principales: Nguyen, Julia, Hanna, Aedan, Veliky, Jacob, Choi, Jae Hoon, Shihora, Dhvani, McGrath, Aleksandra, Kaushal, Neil, Edobor-Osula, Folorunsho, Chu, Alice
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9677149/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2473011421S00847
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author Nguyen, Julia
Hanna, Aedan
Veliky, Jacob
Choi, Jae Hoon
Shihora, Dhvani
McGrath, Aleksandra
Kaushal, Neil
Edobor-Osula, Folorunsho
Chu, Alice
author_facet Nguyen, Julia
Hanna, Aedan
Veliky, Jacob
Choi, Jae Hoon
Shihora, Dhvani
McGrath, Aleksandra
Kaushal, Neil
Edobor-Osula, Folorunsho
Chu, Alice
author_sort Nguyen, Julia
collection PubMed
description CATEGORY: Other; Ankle; Hindfoot; Midfoot/Forefoot INTRODUCTION/PURPOSE: The Ponseti method of serial casting has been recognized as the gold standard for management of idiopathic clubfoot, a very common congenital foot deformity. While the short to midterm success of the method has been widely confirmed in the literature, there are very limited published studies of the longer term trend of relapse. Dr. Ponseti's own definitive assessment of the long term result has not been decisively reevaluated by the literature. This systematic review examines the long-term functional outcomes and evaluates the relapse rates of the Ponseti method. METHODS: A comprehensive search was conducted of PubMed, CINAHL, Web of Science, and Cochrane from inception to December 2020 to identify literature on clubfoot. Using PRISMA guidelines, the search terms clubfoot OR clubfeet OR clubbed foot OR clubbed feet OR talipes equinovarus were used. Articles containing more than three human subjects, were included. The database was searched for longitudinal studies of pediatric, idiopathic clubfoot management with the Ponseti method. Retrospective studies of primary Ponseti management performed on neonates and children up to twenty four months old and with reported mean follow-up of two years or longer were included. Evaluation reported according to different scoring systems based on clinical examination of foot function, radiographic studies, or patient satisfaction questionnaires were dichotomized as success (good to satisfactory results) or failure (residual or relapse that requires corrective management or surgery). Probability of less than 0.05 is considered statistically significant. RESULTS: The search yielded 20 articles following 2782 treated idiopathic clubfeet for 6.4 (2.6 - 19) years. The rate of successful initial correction was 97% (86.6% - 100%), satisfactory functional outcomes at last follow-up was 90% (63.4% - 100%), relapse was 21% (5.3% - 68%), and surgery needed to correct relapse was 9% (2.5% - 24%). Functional outcomes were inversely correlated with follow-up to 9 years (R= -0.5300, p= 0.0173), then became insignificantly associated when following up to 19 years (R= - 0.2480, p= 0.1458). Relapse rate was strongly correlated with follow-up to 9 years (R= 0.5540, p= 0.0129), then subsided thereafter to 19 years (R= 0.3792, p= 0.0495). The frequency of surgical release correlated with follow-up in a similar pattern, strongly up to 9 years (R= 0.6204, p= 0.0052), subsiding thereafter to 19 years (R= 0.3142, p= 0.0887). CONCLUSION: The short-term trends were consistent with literature findings that the rate of relapse increased during the first ten years, leading to lower patient satisfaction and higher rate of surgical correction. However, our new findings of weak long-term correlation and declining deformity relapse after nine years supported Dr. Ponseti's own assessment that late relapses were exceptions. The trend was consistent with uncommon returning relapses after a secondary corrective management or surgery. This trend also supports the postulation that the cause of relapse was non-compliance with foot abduction bracing, rather than clinicians' learning curves, age at presentation, or deformity severity.
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spelling pubmed-96771492022-11-22 Prospects of Long Term Relapse after Management of Pediatric Clubfoot with the Ponseti Method: A Systematic Review Nguyen, Julia Hanna, Aedan Veliky, Jacob Choi, Jae Hoon Shihora, Dhvani McGrath, Aleksandra Kaushal, Neil Edobor-Osula, Folorunsho Chu, Alice Foot Ankle Orthop Article CATEGORY: Other; Ankle; Hindfoot; Midfoot/Forefoot INTRODUCTION/PURPOSE: The Ponseti method of serial casting has been recognized as the gold standard for management of idiopathic clubfoot, a very common congenital foot deformity. While the short to midterm success of the method has been widely confirmed in the literature, there are very limited published studies of the longer term trend of relapse. Dr. Ponseti's own definitive assessment of the long term result has not been decisively reevaluated by the literature. This systematic review examines the long-term functional outcomes and evaluates the relapse rates of the Ponseti method. METHODS: A comprehensive search was conducted of PubMed, CINAHL, Web of Science, and Cochrane from inception to December 2020 to identify literature on clubfoot. Using PRISMA guidelines, the search terms clubfoot OR clubfeet OR clubbed foot OR clubbed feet OR talipes equinovarus were used. Articles containing more than three human subjects, were included. The database was searched for longitudinal studies of pediatric, idiopathic clubfoot management with the Ponseti method. Retrospective studies of primary Ponseti management performed on neonates and children up to twenty four months old and with reported mean follow-up of two years or longer were included. Evaluation reported according to different scoring systems based on clinical examination of foot function, radiographic studies, or patient satisfaction questionnaires were dichotomized as success (good to satisfactory results) or failure (residual or relapse that requires corrective management or surgery). Probability of less than 0.05 is considered statistically significant. RESULTS: The search yielded 20 articles following 2782 treated idiopathic clubfeet for 6.4 (2.6 - 19) years. The rate of successful initial correction was 97% (86.6% - 100%), satisfactory functional outcomes at last follow-up was 90% (63.4% - 100%), relapse was 21% (5.3% - 68%), and surgery needed to correct relapse was 9% (2.5% - 24%). Functional outcomes were inversely correlated with follow-up to 9 years (R= -0.5300, p= 0.0173), then became insignificantly associated when following up to 19 years (R= - 0.2480, p= 0.1458). Relapse rate was strongly correlated with follow-up to 9 years (R= 0.5540, p= 0.0129), then subsided thereafter to 19 years (R= 0.3792, p= 0.0495). The frequency of surgical release correlated with follow-up in a similar pattern, strongly up to 9 years (R= 0.6204, p= 0.0052), subsiding thereafter to 19 years (R= 0.3142, p= 0.0887). CONCLUSION: The short-term trends were consistent with literature findings that the rate of relapse increased during the first ten years, leading to lower patient satisfaction and higher rate of surgical correction. However, our new findings of weak long-term correlation and declining deformity relapse after nine years supported Dr. Ponseti's own assessment that late relapses were exceptions. The trend was consistent with uncommon returning relapses after a secondary corrective management or surgery. This trend also supports the postulation that the cause of relapse was non-compliance with foot abduction bracing, rather than clinicians' learning curves, age at presentation, or deformity severity. SAGE Publications 2022-11-16 /pmc/articles/PMC9677149/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2473011421S00847 Text en © The Author(s) 2022 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access pages (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle Article
Nguyen, Julia
Hanna, Aedan
Veliky, Jacob
Choi, Jae Hoon
Shihora, Dhvani
McGrath, Aleksandra
Kaushal, Neil
Edobor-Osula, Folorunsho
Chu, Alice
Prospects of Long Term Relapse after Management of Pediatric Clubfoot with the Ponseti Method: A Systematic Review
title Prospects of Long Term Relapse after Management of Pediatric Clubfoot with the Ponseti Method: A Systematic Review
title_full Prospects of Long Term Relapse after Management of Pediatric Clubfoot with the Ponseti Method: A Systematic Review
title_fullStr Prospects of Long Term Relapse after Management of Pediatric Clubfoot with the Ponseti Method: A Systematic Review
title_full_unstemmed Prospects of Long Term Relapse after Management of Pediatric Clubfoot with the Ponseti Method: A Systematic Review
title_short Prospects of Long Term Relapse after Management of Pediatric Clubfoot with the Ponseti Method: A Systematic Review
title_sort prospects of long term relapse after management of pediatric clubfoot with the ponseti method: a systematic review
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9677149/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2473011421S00847
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