Epidemiology, complications and patient-reported outcomes for surgically treated traumatic foot injuries

IF 2 3区 医学 Q3 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
Thirza A. Berk , Quirine M.J. van der Vliet , Adele Usai , D.P.J. Smeeing , Jan Siert Reinders , Detlef van der Velde , Egbert Jan M.M. Verleisdonk , Jort Keizer , Mark C.P.M. van Baal , Loek P.H. Leenen , Falco Hietbrink , Roderick M. Houwert
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Literature on quality of life and functionality following various types of surgically treated foot injuries is limited, despite the significant impact on patients’ daily lives. As a result, managing patient expectations becomes challenging. The current objective is to prospectively evaluate long-term patient-reported and clinical outcomes of surgically treated foot injuries.

Methods

A multicentre prospective cohort study was conducted. Adult patients undergoing operative treatment for traumatic foot fractures and/or dislocations were eligible for inclusion. Data on patient demographics, treatment, patient-reported outcomes (health-related quality of life assessed using the EuroQol questionnaires, functionality evaluated by the American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society scales, satisfaction, and return to work/sports), complications, and reoperations were collected. Follow-up lasted two years. Statistically significant and clinically relevant changes in outcomes were determined using the Friedman test and minimally important differences.

Results

The follow-up response rate was 92%. Patients showed significant and relevant differences in EuroQol scores during follow-up compared to pre-trauma, not returning to their baseline levels. The EQ-VAS™ showed clinically relevant improvement between 1 and 2 years postoperatively. Patients with forefoot injuries had better EuroQol and sports function scores, but lower satisfaction compared to those with midfoot and hindfoot injuries. The EuroQol pain domain exhibited the largest increase in reported problems, followed by usual activities, mobility, anxiety, and self-care. In the forefoot, midfoot, and hindfoot subgroups, the complication rates were 50%, 19%, and 44% respectively. Most complications were related to posttraumatic arthrosis (26%) and infections (24%). Over half of the patients (52%) underwent implant removal. The majority of reoperations involved secondary arthrodesis (37%) or revision surgery (32%).

Discussion and conclusion

Strengths of this study include the prospective multicentre setting, the high response and follow-up rates, its epidemiological nature, and the inclusion of various injury types with stratified data presentation. Limitations include recall bias, suboptimal minimal important differences, group heterogeneity, and the use of the suboptimal AOFAS scales.
The overview of patient-reported and clinical outcomes for patients treated surgically for acute foot injuries presented in this study show persisting impairment in functionality at the two-year follow-up. The data will help manage patient expectations effectively.
外科治疗创伤性足损伤的流行病学、并发症和患者报告的结果。
背景:尽管对患者的日常生活有重大影响,但关于各种类型手术治疗足部损伤后的生活质量和功能的文献有限。因此,管理病人的期望变得具有挑战性。目前的目的是前瞻性地评估手术治疗足部损伤的长期患者报告和临床结果。方法:采用多中心前瞻性队列研究。接受外伤性足部骨折和/或脱位手术治疗的成年患者符合入选条件。收集了患者人口统计学、治疗、患者报告的结果(使用EuroQol问卷评估健康相关生活质量、美国骨科足踝协会量表评估功能、满意度和重返工作/运动)、并发症和再手术的数据。随访持续了两年。使用Friedman检验确定结果的统计学显著性和临床相关变化和最小重要差异。结果:随访有效率为92%。与创伤前相比,患者在随访期间的EuroQol评分显示出显著的相关差异,没有恢复到基线水平。EQ-VAS™在术后1 - 2年间显示临床相关改善。前足损伤患者EuroQol和运动功能评分较高,但满意度较中足和后足损伤患者低。EuroQol疼痛领域报告的问题增加最多,其次是日常活动、流动性、焦虑和自我护理。在前足、中足和后足亚组中,并发症发生率分别为50%、19%和44%。大多数并发症与创伤后关节(26%)和感染(24%)有关。超过一半的患者(52%)接受了种植体移除手术。大多数再手术涉及继发性关节融合术(37%)或翻修手术(32%)。讨论与结论:本研究的优势包括前瞻性的多中心环境,高反应率和随访率,其流行病学性质,以及纳入不同类型的损伤并分层呈现数据。局限性包括回忆偏倚、次优最小重要差异、组异质性和次优AOFAS量表的使用。本研究对急性足部损伤手术治疗的患者报告和临床结果的概述显示,在两年的随访中,患者的功能持续受损。这些数据将有助于有效地管理患者的期望。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
8.00%
发文量
699
审稿时长
96 days
期刊介绍: Injury was founded in 1969 and is an international journal dealing with all aspects of trauma care and accident surgery. Our primary aim is to facilitate the exchange of ideas, techniques and information among all members of the trauma team.
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