Conference Coverage

What Does Natural Healing of ACL Ruptures Mean for Long-Term Outcomes?


 

FROM OARSI 2024

ACL Continuity and Long-Term Outcomes

At OARSI 2024, Dr. Filbay and colleagues reported an even longer-term secondary analysis of the KANON trial on the relationship between ACL healing at 5 years and outcomes at 11 years. The results were first reported in NEJM Evidence.

Dr. Filbay reported that participants with ACL continuity on MRI at 5 years actually had worse patient-reported outcomes 11 years later than those who were managed with early or delayed ACL reconstruction.

“This does not align with previous findings suggesting better 2-year outcomes compared to the surgically managed groups,” Dr. Filbay said.

However, people with ACL continuity following rehabilitation did seem to show numerically similar or fewer signs of radiographic OA at 11 years vs the surgical groups.

Radiographic OA of the tibiofemoral joint (TFJ) or patellofemoral joint (PFJ) at 11 years was observed in a respective 14% and 21% of people with ACL continuity at 5 years (n = 14) and in 22% and 11% of people with ACL discontinuity at 5 years in the rehabilitation alone group.

By comparison, radiographic OA of the TFJ or PFJ at 11 years was seen in a respective 23% and 35% of people who had rehabilitation with delayed surgery (n = 26) and in 18% and 41% of those who had early surgery (n = 49).

These are descriptive results, Dr. Filbay said, because the numbers were too small to do a statistical analysis. Further, larger, longitudinal studies will be needed.

Posttraumatic OA After ACL Surgery

Elsewhere at OARSI 2024, Matthew Harkey, PhD, and colleagues from Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, reported data showing that nearly two thirds of people who undergo surgical reconstruction have symptoms at 6 months that could be indicative of early knee OA.

Knee symptoms indicative of OA declined to 53% at 12 months and 45% at 24 months.

“It’s a bit complex — we can’t outright say arthritis is developing, but there’s a large group of patients whose symptoms linger long after surgery,” Dr. Harkey said in a press release.

“Often, clinicians assume that these postoperative symptoms will naturally improve as patients reengage with their usual activities. However, what we’re seeing suggests these symptoms persist and likely require a targeted approach to manage or improve them,” Dr. Harkey said.

The analysis used data on 3752 individuals aged 14-40 years who were enrolled in the New Zealand ACL Registry and who completed the KOOS at 6, 12, and 24 months after having ACL reconstruction.

Dr. Harkey and team reported that one in three people had persistent early OA symptoms at 2 years, while 23% had no early OA symptoms at any timepoint.

The studies were independently supported. Dr. Filbay and Dr. Harkey had no relevant financial relationships to report.

Dr. Filbay and colleagues have developed a treatment decision aid for individuals who have sustained an ACL injury. This provides information on the different treatment options available and how they compare.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Guidelines: Don’t delay total joint arthroplasty for additional nonoperative therapies
MDedge Surgery
Marathon running does not increase arthritis risk: Survey
MDedge Surgery
Presurgical expectations may influence patients’ attitudes, experiences after knee replacement
MDedge Surgery
Surgery for early breast cancer can worsen frailty in older women
MDedge Surgery
‘Decapitated’ boy saved by surgery team
MDedge Surgery
Study eases fears: Knee surgery surge not linked to premature intervention
MDedge Surgery
A Military Nurse Saves a Life After a Brutal Rollover Crash
MDedge Surgery
Are There Benefits to Taking GLP-1 Receptor Agonists Before Joint Surgery?
MDedge Surgery
Watchful Waiting Less Expensive, as Effective as Physical Therapy for Frozen Shoulder
MDedge Surgery
Bone Infections Increase After S. aureus Bacteremia in Patients With Rheumatoid Arthritis
MDedge Surgery