4.5 Article

Fixation of periprosthetic or osteoporotic distal femoral fractures with locking plates: a pilot randomised controlled trial

Journal

INTERNATIONAL ORTHOPAEDICS
Volume 43, Issue 5, Pages 1193-1204

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00264-018-4061-1

Keywords

Femoral fracture; Locking plate; Periprosthetic fracture; Polyaxial

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IntroductionWe hypothesised that the use of a polyaxial locking plate design offers the same clinical benefits as a monoaxial locking plate system following distal femoral osteoporotic/periprosthetic fracture fixation.MethodA multicentre prospective randomised pilot trial was conducted. Inclusion criteria were patients over 60years with a displaced osteoporotic or periprosthetic distal femoral fracture. Details documented included time to union, complications, reinterventions and functional outcomes according to the Oxford knee score and EuroQol EQ-5D. Analysis of factors influencing an early fracture healing response was performed between those with clear features of radiological callus formation at threemonths. Statistical analysis was performed using a logistic regression model with multiple covariates assessed for each plate system (1:1 ratio) over a follow-up period of one year.ResultsForty patients (34 females) with a mean age of 77 (60-99) were recruited. Four patients deceased within the first six months. Twenty-five patients united by the six month follow-up. Six more patients progressed to union between six and nine months. Five patients developed non-union (two patients had implant failure; one in each group) and all underwent revision surgery. Malunion was evident in two cases, one with 15 degrees of valgus (monoaxial plate), and one with 12 degrees of recurvatum (polyaxial plate). Between the two plate systems, statistical analysis revealed no significant differences in most of the recorded parameters. Radiological features of early bone healing were present when the surgical approach was smaller (p=0.015), and when a greater working length of the bridging plate was present (p=0.016).ConclusionBoth plate systems demonstrated good union rates and limited implant related complications. Good reduction, mechanically sound construct and respect of the local fracture biology was more important than the particular plate design characteristics.

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