Patient and surgical risk factors for dislocation after reverse shoulder arthroplasty: a study by the American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons multicenter complications of reverse shoulder arthroplasty research group

Q4 Medicine
ASES Complications of RSA Research Group, Evan A. Glass BS , Adam R. Bowler BA , Michael J. Maxwell MD , Declan R. Diestel BA , Miranda McDonald-Stahl BS , Calista S. Stevens BA , Christopher Canizares BS , Pamela A. Chan MS , Daniel P. Swanson BS , Ryan Lohre MD , Michael A. Moverman MD , Richard Puzzitiello MD , Himmat Sahi MS , Kuhan A. Mahendraraj BA, MS , Kiet Le PA-C , Warren R. Dunn MD , Dylan J. Cannon BS , Lisa GM. Friedman MD , Jaina A. Gaudette BSE , Andrew Jawa MD
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

The purpose of this study was to identify patient and surgical factors associated with dislocation after reverse shoulder arthroplasty (RSA) in a large multicenter cohort.

Methods

A retrospective study using data from 15 institutions and 24 American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons members across the United States was performed. Patients who underwent RSA between January 2013 and June 2019 with 3-month minimum follow-up were included. All components of methodology were determined by the Delphi method, an iterative survey process, requiring 75% consensus among all surgeons. Dislocations were defined as complete loss of articulation between the humeral component and the glenosphere with associated radiographic confirmation. Binary logistic regression was performed to determine predictors of dislocation following RSA.

Results

Overall, 6621 patients with a mean follow-up of 19.2 ± 15.6 months were included. The incidence of dislocation was 2.1% (n = 138), 1.6% (n = 99) in primary RSA, and 6.5% (n = 39) among revision RSAs (P < .001). Dislocations occurred at a median of 7.0 weeks (interquartile range 3.0-36.0) after surgery with 22.5% (n = 31) following a trauma. Factors independently predictive of dislocation, in order of decreasing effect, were a preoperative diagnosis of nonunion fracture sequelae (odds ratio [OR] 8.31; P < .001), revision arthroplasty (OR 4.82; P < .001), the presence of a humeral spacer (OR 3.24; P < .001), a preoperative diagnosis of rotator cuff arthropathy or massive rotator cuff tear (OR 2.91; P < .001), the presence of a constrained polyethylene liner (OR 2.18; P = .001), male sex (OR 1.95; P = .001), and the lack of subscapularis repair (OR 1.61; P = .032) indicating a modest improvement in model fit compared to the null model.

Conclusion

Patient factors such as being male, having large rotator cuff tears, undergoing revision RSA, or undergoing RSA for the sequelae of fracture nonunion appear to significantly increase the risk of postoperative dislocation after RSA. Surgical factors predictive of dislocation included the presence of a humeral spacer, constrained polyethylene liner, and lack of subscapularis repair, indicating a surgeon intraoperative awareness of potential instability.
反肩关节置换术后脱位的患者和手术危险因素:美国肩肘外科医师协会多中心反肩关节置换术并发症研究组的研究
本研究的目的是在一个大型多中心队列中确定与反向肩关节置换术(RSA)后脱位相关的患者和手术因素。方法回顾性分析来自美国15家机构和24名美国肩肘外科医生的数据。纳入了2013年1月至2019年6月期间接受RSA治疗的患者,随访时间至少为3个月。方法的所有组成部分由德尔菲法确定,这是一种迭代调查过程,要求所有外科医生75%的共识。脱位定义为肱骨关节和关节球之间的关节完全丧失,并有相关的x线片证实。采用二元逻辑回归来确定RSA后脱位的预测因素。结果共纳入6621例患者,平均随访时间19.2±15.6个月。原发性RSA脱位发生率分别为2.1% (n = 138)、1.6% (n = 99)和6.5% (n = 39) (P <;措施)。脱位发生在手术后中位7.0周(四分位数范围3.0-36.0),其中22.5% (n = 31)发生在外伤后。独立预测脱位的因素依次为术前诊断骨折不愈合后遗症(优势比[OR] 8.31;P & lt;.001),翻修关节置换术(OR 4.82;P & lt;.001),肱骨垫片的存在(OR 3.24;P & lt;.001),术前诊断为肩袖关节病或大量肩袖撕裂(or 2.91;P & lt;.001),约束聚乙烯衬垫的存在(OR 2.18;P = .001),男性(OR 1.95;P = .001),肩胛下肌修复缺失(OR 1.61;P = .032),表明与零模型相比,模型拟合有适度的改善。结论男性、肩袖撕裂较大、行RSA翻修术或因骨折不愈合后遗症行RSA手术等因素明显增加了RSA术后脱位的风险。预测脱位的手术因素包括肱骨垫片、约束聚乙烯衬垫和肩胛下肌修复不足,这表明外科医生术中意识到潜在的不稳定性。
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来源期刊
Seminars in Arthroplasty
Seminars in Arthroplasty Medicine-Surgery
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
104
期刊介绍: Each issue of Seminars in Arthroplasty provides a comprehensive, current overview of a single topic in arthroplasty. The journal addresses orthopedic surgeons, providing authoritative reviews with emphasis on new developments relevant to their practice.
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