足球运动员的膝关节软骨损伤:手术治疗后的临床效果和运动恢复:文献的系统回顾。

IF 2.7 4区 医学 Q1 ORTHOPEDICS
L. Andriolo, Theodorakys Marín Fermín, Giulia Marcella Maryse Chiari Gaggia, Andreas Serner, E. Kon, Emmanuel Papakostas, Andrew Massey, Peter Verdonk, Giuseppe Filardo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

DESIGNA于2023年8月在PubMed、WebOfScience和Cochrane图书馆上进行了系统性文献综述,收集了有关足球运动员软骨损伤手术策略的研究。结果共纳入 15 项研究,涉及 409 名足球运动员(86% 为男性,14% 为女性):9 项前瞻性研究和 2 项回顾性病例系列研究、1 项随机对照试验、1 项前瞻性比较研究、1 项病例报告和 1 项调查。骨髓刺激(BMS)技术的文献最多。病变大小影响治疗方案的选择:小病变(1.1 平方厘米)采用清创法,中/小病变(2.2-3.0 平方厘米)采用骨髓刺激法、骨软骨自体移植法(OAT)、基质辅助自体软骨细胞移植法(MACT)和支架增强骨髓刺激法,大病变(5.8 平方厘米)采用自体软骨细胞植入法(ACI)。这些手术方案在临床效果和恢复运动能力方面产生了不同的结果,其中清创术和支架植入 BMS 恢复最快。目前的证据有限,方法学质量差异较大(修正的科尔曼方法学评分 43.5/100),偏倚风险较高。结论软骨损伤的决策似乎优先考虑早期恢复运动,清创和微骨折是最常用的技术。病变大小会影响治疗选择。然而,目前的证据还很有限。需要进一步的研究来证实这些发现,并根据具体的患者和病变特征以及治疗方法在恢复运动和长期效果方面的潜力,建立一种基于病例的方法来治疗足球运动员的软骨损伤。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Knee Cartilage Injuries in Football Players: Clinical Outcomes and Return to Sport After Surgical Treatment: A Systematic Review of the Literature.
OBJECTIVE To systematically review the literature and analyze clinical outcomes and return-to-sport after surgical management of cartilage injuries in football players. DESIGN A systematic literature review was performed in August 2023 on PubMed, WebOfScience, and Cochrane Library to collect studies on surgical strategies for cartilage lesions in football players. Methodological quality and risk of bias were assessed with the modified Coleman Methodology score and RoB2 and RoBANS2 tools. RESULTS Fifteen studies on 409 football players (86% men, 14% women) were included: nine prospective and two retrospective case series, one randomized controlled trial, one prospective comparative study, one case report, and one survey. Bone marrow stimulation (BMS) techniques were the most documented. The lesion size influenced the treatment choice: debridement was used for small lesions (1.1 cm2), BMS, osteochondral autograft transplantation (OAT), matrix-assisted autologous chondrocytes transplantation (MACT), and scaffold-augmented BMS for small/mid-size lesions (2.2-3.0 cm2), and autologous chondrocytes implantation (ACI) for larger lesions (5.8 cm2). The surgical options yielded different results in terms of clinical outcome and return-to-sport, with fastest recovery for debridement and scaffold-augmented BMS. The current evidence is limited with large methodological quality variation (modified Coleman Methodology score 43.5/100) and a high risk of bias. CONCLUSIONS Decision-making in cartilage injuries seems to privilege early return-to-sport, making debridement and microfractures the most used techniques. The lesion size influences the treatment choice. However, the current evidence is limited. Further studies are needed to confirm these findings and establish a case-based approach to treat cartilage injuries in football players based on the specific patient and lesion characteristics and the treatments' potential in terms of both return-to-sport and long-term results. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Systematic review, level IV.
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来源期刊
CARTILAGE
CARTILAGE ORTHOPEDICS-
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
7.10%
发文量
80
期刊介绍: CARTILAGE publishes articles related to the musculoskeletal system with particular attention to cartilage repair, development, function, degeneration, transplantation, and rehabilitation. The journal is a forum for the exchange of ideas for the many types of researchers and clinicians involved in cartilage biology and repair. A primary objective of CARTILAGE is to foster the cross-fertilization of the findings between clinical and basic sciences throughout the various disciplines involved in cartilage repair. The journal publishes full length original manuscripts on all types of cartilage including articular, nasal, auricular, tracheal/bronchial, and intervertebral disc fibrocartilage. Manuscripts on clinical and laboratory research are welcome. Review articles, editorials, and letters are also encouraged. The ICRS envisages CARTILAGE as a forum for the exchange of knowledge among clinicians, scientists, patients, and researchers. The International Cartilage Repair Society (ICRS) is dedicated to promotion, encouragement, and distribution of fundamental and applied research of cartilage in order to permit a better knowledge of function and dysfunction of articular cartilage and its repair.
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