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General Orthopaedics

NONUNION OF SCAPHOID FRACTURES: DETERMINANTS OF OUTCOME OF BONE GRAFT SURGERY

The Welsh Orthopaedic Society (WOS) Annual National Meeting, Oswestry, May 2017.



Abstract

The aim of our study is to investigate the natural history of scaphoid non-union.

Factors affecting the outcome of scaphoid fracture non-union surgery were assessed using data collected retrospectively from 785 cases treated at 18 centres throughout the UK. All cases had undergone this surgery before October 2014, ensuring a minimum period of 2 years between surgery and data collection from the medical records.

Smoking status significantly influenced the union rate of 94 proximal pole (non-smokers = 71%, smokers = 44%, p < 0.05) but not waist (non-smokers = 73% non-unions.

Type of bone graft did not affect the union rate of the 282 waist nonunions (iliac crest = 69%; non-vascular distal radius = 75% and vascularised distal radius = 70%: P=0.35), but did influence the union rate of the 98 proximal pole nonunions (iliac crest = 58%; non-vascular distal radius = 58% and vascularised distal radius = 82%: P=0.004).

Time interval between fracture and non-union surgery did not affect the union rate of 121 proximal pole nonunions (3–6 months = 56%; 6–12 months = 76%; 1–2 years = 69%; 2+years = 54%: P=0.5), but did influence the union rate of 303 nonunions of the waist (3–6 months = 80%; 6–12 months = 82%; 1–2 years = 65%; 2+years = 55%: P=0.02).

Non-unions of the proximal pole appear to be influenced by smoking status and bone graft type, whereas non-unions of the scaphoid are influenced by the time to non-union surgery.