4.3 Article

Surgical treatment for recurrent shoulder instability: factors influencing surgeon decision making

Journal

JOURNAL OF SHOULDER AND ELBOW SURGERY
Volume 30, Issue 3, Pages e85-e102

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jse.2020.07.003

Keywords

shoulder instability; choice; conjoint analysis; contingent-behavior; bone loss

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The study used a contingent-behavior questionnaire to determine what factors drive surgeons to choose bony procedures over soft tissue procedures for recurrent anterior shoulder instability, finding that the amount of glenoid bone loss, patient age, and activity level were the most significant factors influencing this decision. Conversely, the number of prior dislocations and glenoid track status did not strongly impact surgical treatment decisions. Surgeons who performed 10 or more open shoulder procedures per year were more likely to recommend bony treatment for shoulder instability.
Background: The optimal surgical approach for recurrent anterior shoulder instability remains controversial, particularly in the face of glenoid and/or humeral bone loss. The purpose of this study was to use a contingent-behavior questionnaire (CBQ) to determine which factors drive surgeons to perform bony procedures over soft tissue procedures to address recurrent anterior shoulder instability. Methods: A CBQ survey presented each respondent with 32 clinical vignettes of recurrent shoulder instability that contained 8 patient factors. The factors included (1) age, (2) sex, (3) hand dominance, (4) number of previous dislocations, (5) activity level, (6) generalized laxity, (7) glenoid bone loss, and (8) glenoid track. The survey was distributed to fellowship-trained surgeons in shoulder/elbow or sports medicine. Respondents were asked to recommend either a soft tissue or bone-based procedure, then specifically recommend a type of procedure. Responses were analyzed using a multinomial-logit regression model that quantified the relative importance of the patient characteristics in choosing bony procedures. Results: Seventy orthopedic surgeons completed the survey, 33 were shoulder/elbow fellowship trained and 37 were sports medicine fellowship trained; 52% were in clinical practice similar to 10 years and 48% <10 years; and 95% reported that the shoulder surgery made up at least 25% of their practice. There were 53% from private practice, 33% from academic medicine, and 14% in government settings. Amount of glenoid bone loss was the single most important factor driving surgeons to perform bony procedures over soft tissue procedures, followed by the patient age (19-25 years) and the patient activity level. The number of prior dislocations and glenoid track status did not have a strong influence on respondents' decision making. Twenty-one percent glenoid bone loss was the threshold of bone loss that influenced decision toward a bony procedure. If surgeons performed 10 or more open procedures per year, they were more likely to perform a bony procedure. Conclusion: The factors that drove surgeons to choose bony procedures were the amount of glenoid bone loss with the threshold at 21%, patient age, and their activity demands. Surprisingly, glenoid track status and the number of previous dislocations did not strongly influence surgical treatment decisions. Ten open shoulder procedures a year seems to provide a level of comfort to recommend bony treatment for shoulder instability. (C) 2020 Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery Board of Trustees. All rights reserved.

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