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  3. Functional and Radiologic Outcomes of Degenerative Versus Traumatic Full-Thickness Rotator Cuff Tears Involving the Supraspinatus Tendon.
 

Functional and Radiologic Outcomes of Degenerative Versus Traumatic Full-Thickness Rotator Cuff Tears Involving the Supraspinatus Tendon.

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Description
Stephanie Erdbrink is a member of the ARCR_Pred Study Group.
BORIS DOI
10.48620/66346
Publisher DOI
10.1177/03635465231219253
PubMed ID
38259113
Description
BACKGROUND

Arthroscopic rotator cuff repair (ARCR) is among the most commonly performed orthopaedic procedures. Several factors-including age, sex, and tear severity-have been identified as predictors for outcome after repair. The influence of the tear etiology on functional and structural outcome remains controversial.

PURPOSE

To investigate the influence of tear etiology (degenerative vs traumatic) on functional and structural outcomes in patients with supraspinatus tendon tears.

STUDY DESIGN

Cohort study; Level of evidence, 2.

METHODS

Patients undergoing ARCR from 19 centers were prospectively enrolled between June 2020 and November 2021. Full-thickness, nonmassive tears involving the supraspinatus tendon were included. Tears were classified as degenerative (chronic shoulder pain, no history of trauma) or traumatic (acute, traumatic onset, no previous shoulder pain). Range of motion, strength, the Subjective Shoulder Value, the Oxford Shoulder Score (OSS), and the Constant-Murley Score (CMS) were assessed before (baseline) and 6 and 12 months after ARCR. The Subjective Shoulder Value and the OSS were also determined at the 24-month follow-up. Repair integrity after 12 months was documented, as well as additional surgeries up to the 24-month follow-up. Tear groups were compared using mixed models adjusted for potential confounding effects.

RESULTS

From a cohort of 973 consecutive patients, 421 patients (degenerative tear, n = 230; traumatic tear, n = 191) met the inclusion criteria. The traumatic tear group had lower mean baseline OSS and CMS scores but significantly greater score changes 12 months after ARCR (OSS, 18 [SD, 8]; CMS, 34 [SD,18] vs degenerative: OSS, 15 [SD, 8]; CMS, 22 [SD, 15]) (P < .001) and significantly higher 12-month overall scores (OSS, 44 [SD, 5]; CMS, 79 [SD, 9] vs degenerative: OSS, 42 [SD, 7]; CMS, 76 [SD, 12]) (P≤ .006). At the 24-month follow-up, neither the OSS (degenerative, 44 [SD, 6]; traumatic, 45 [SD, 6]; P = .346) nor the rates of repair failure (degenerative, 14 [6.1%]; traumatic 12 [6.3%]; P = .934) and additional surgeries (7 [3%]; 7 [3.7%]; P = .723) differed between groups.

CONCLUSION

Patients with degenerative and traumatic full-thickness supraspinatus tendon tears who had ARCR show satisfactory short-term functional results. Although patients with traumatic tears have lower baseline functional scores, they rehabilitate over time and show comparable clinical results 1 year after ARCR. Similarly, degenerative and traumatic rotator cuff tears show comparable structural outcomes, which suggests that degenerated tendons retain healing potential.
Date of Publication
2024-02
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 - Technology::610 - Medicine & health
300 - Social sciences, sociology & anthropology::360 - Social problems & social services
Keyword(s)
degenerative rotator cuff tear rotator cuff repair shoulder arthroscopy shoulder surgery outcome traumatic rotator cuff tear
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Baum, Cornelia
Audigé, Laurent
Stojanov, Thomas
Müller, Sebastian A
Candrian, Christian
Müller, Andreas M
Rosso, Claudio
Fankhauser, Lena
Willscheid, Gernot
Moroder, Philipp
Akgün, Doruk
Danzinger, Victor
Gebauer, Henry
Imiolczyk, Jan-Philipp
Karpinski, Katrin
Lacheta, Lucca
Minkus, Marvin
Paksoy, Alp
Samaniego, Eduardo
Thiele, Kathi
Weiss, Isabella
Suter, Thomas
Müller-Lebschi, Julia
Mueller, Sebastian
Saner, Markus
Haag-Schumacher, Claudia
Tamborrini-Schütz, Giorgio
Trong, Mai Lan Dao
Buitrago-Tellez, Carlos
Hasler, Julian
Riede, Ulf
Weber, Sandra
Moor, Beat
Biner, Matthias
Fournier, Sarah
Gallusser, Nicolas
Marietan, Deborah
Pawlak, Sebastien
Spormann, Christoph
Hansen, Britta
Mamisch, Nadja
Durchholz, Holger
Bräm, Jakob
Cunningham, Gregory
Kourhani, Abed
Ossipow, Sarah
Simao, Patricia
Lädermann, Alexandre
Egli, Rainer
Erdbrink, Stephanie
Flückiger, Remy
Lombardo, Paolo
Pinworasarn, Tawan
Scacchi, Philipp
Weihs, Johannes
Zumstein, Matthias
Flury, Matthias
Berther, Ralph
Ehrmann, Christine
Hübscher, Larissa
Schwappach, Davidorcid-logo
Institut für Sozial- und Präventivmedizin (ISPM)
Eid, Karim
Bensler, Susanne
Fritz, Yannick
Grünberger, Nisha
Kriechling, Philipp
Langthaler, Daniel
Niehaus, Richard
Nobs, Raffaela
Benninger, Emanuel
de Groot, Quintin
Doert, Aleksis
Ebert, Sebastian
Grimm, Philemon
Mottier, Fabian
Pisan, Markus
Schätz, Jan
Schwank, Ariane
Wiedenbach, Julian
Scheibel, Markus
Audigé, Laurent
Bellmann, Frederik
Brune, Daniela
de Jong, Marije
Diermayr, Stefan
Endell, David
Etter, Marco
Freislederer, Florian
Gkikopoulos, Nikitas
Glanzmann, Michael
Grobet, Cécile
Jung, Christian
Moro, Fabrizio
Moroder, Philipp
Ringer, Ralph
Schätz, Jan
Schwyzer, Hans-Kaspar
Weber, Béatrice
Wehrli, Martina
Wirth, Barbara
Nötzli, Manuela
Franz, Anne
Oswald, Jörg
Steiger, Birgit
Ameziane, Yacine
Child, Christopher
Spagna, Giovanni
Candrian, Christian
Del Grande, Filippo
Feltri, Pietro
Filardo, Giuseppe
Marbach, Francesco
Schönweger, Florian
Jost, Bernhard
Badulescu, Michael
Lüscher, Stephanie
Napieralski, Fabian
Öhrström, Lena
Olach, Martin
Rechsteiner, Jan
Scheler, Jörg
Spross, Christian
Zdravkovic, Vilijam
Zumstein, Matthias A
Chlasta, Adrian
Gerber, Kate
Hayoz, Annabel
Müller-Lebschi, Julia
Schuster, Frederick
Wieser, Karl
Borbas, Paul
Bouaicha, Samy
Camenzind, Roland
Catanzaro, Sabrina
Gerber, Christian
Grubhofer, Florian
Hasler, Anita
Hochreiter, Bettina
Marcus, Roy
Selman, Farah
Sutter, Reto
Wyss, Sabine
Appenzeller-Herzog, Christian
Aghlmandi, Soheila
Ahlborn, Ilona
Baum, Cornelia
Eckers, Franziska
Grezda, Kushtrim
Hatz, Simone
Hunziker, Sabina
Stojanov, Thomas
Taha, Mohy
Tamborrini-Schütz, Giorgio
Mueller, Andreas Marc
Additional Credits
Institut für Sozial- und Präventivmedizin (ISPM)
Clinic of Orthopaedic Surgery
Series
American journal of sports medicine
Publisher
Sage Publications
ISSN
0363-5465
Access(Rights)
open.access
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