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Poster 333: Outcomes of Anterior Closing Wedge High Tibial Osteotomy in Patients Undergoing ACL Revision Reconstruction

Objectives: Graft failure rates following anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction have been reported up to 30%. According to the literature, one anatomic variant linked to graft reinjury is a high posterior tibial slope. As a result, surgeons are exploring the effectiveness of slope reducing...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Orthopaedic journal of sports medicine 2023-07, Vol.11 (7_suppl3)
Main Authors: Reyes, Griffin, Higbie, Steven, Bailey, Lane, Flores, Steven, Mansour, Alfred, Lowe, Walter, Charen, Daniel
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Objectives: Graft failure rates following anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction have been reported up to 30%. According to the literature, one anatomic variant linked to graft reinjury is a high posterior tibial slope. As a result, surgeons are exploring the effectiveness of slope reducing high tibial osteotomy (HTO) to reduce the subsequent reinjury risk. While cadaveric models indicate that this procedure decreases the forces across the ACL graft, there is limited evidence demonstrating its efficacy in clinical trials. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to compare self-reported patient outcomes between patients undergoing ACL revision surgery with a slope reducing high tibial osteotomy (ACL+HTO) and matched controls undergoing revision ACL reconstruction without slope reducing HTO. We hypothesized that patients undergoing ACL+HTO would exhibit similar outcomes with a low failure rate when compared to their matched counterparts. Methods: A retrospective matched-case control study was conducted for patients undergoing ACL revision reconstruction from 2018 to 2021, utilizing a single surgeon database (n = 1,781). Patients in the HTO group were included if they were at least one year out from surgical ACL reconstruction and slope reducing osteotomy. Patients were excluded if they had a primary ACL reconstruction or no concomitant ACL reconstruction with an HTO. Patients in the ACL+HTO group were age, gender, and setting-matched to a control group of patients undergoing revision ACL reconstruction. Descriptive patient demographic and surgical data were obtained, including pre/postoperative posterior tibial slope (o) for the HTO group. Complications and injury surveillance was conducted throughout the postoperative follow-up period. Primary outcome measures included the Single Assessment Numeric Scale (SANE), and graft failure rates at 24 months. Secondary outcomes included return to sport rate and level, and postoperative complications (infection, loss of motion, deep vein thrombosis, etc). Generalized linear models were conducted using parametric and nonparametric equivalents to compare baseline and outcome measures between groups with an a-priori alpha level of .05. Results: From a group of 364 revision ACL reconstructions, 9 patients met the inclusion criteria for the ACL+HTO group (Table 1). This group was age, gender and revision matched to 30 patients in the control group. Baseline comparisons revealed that the ACL control group weighed
ISSN:2325-9671
2325-9671
DOI:10.1177/2325967123S00301