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General Orthopaedics

ANTERIOR VERSUS LATERAL TOTAL ANKLE ARTHROPLASTIES: A DIFFERENT REOPERATION PROFILE

The Canadian Orthopaedic Association (COA) and Canadian Orthopaedic Research Society (CORS) Virtual Annual Meeting 2020, held online, 19–20 June 2020.



Abstract

Recent advances in arthroplasty for the hip and the knee have motivated modern foot and ankle research to perfect the implant and technique for the optimal total ankle replacement. Unlike in the hip where different approaches can be done with similar implants, the approach of a total ankle is intimately associated to the prosthetic design. The anterior and lateral approaches have pros and cons regarding their respective soft tissue complications, osteotomy necessity, orientation of the bone cut and gutter visualization. While both have been studied independently, very few reports have compared both in the same setting. This study retrospectively looked at the difference in reoperations rate after each ankle arthroplasty within two years estimating that both had similar rate of return to the operating room.

A retrospective study was conducted from a single center between 2014 and 2017 including a total of 115 total ankles performed by one of four fellowship-trained foot and ankle surgeon. Re-operations were reported in the charts as an operative report. The index approach used was determined by the surgeon's practice preference. Patients were included when they had a primary TAR in the timeframe noted and had a complete dataset up to at least the two-year data.

This cohort comprised 67 anterior and 48 lateral with balanced demographic for age (95%CI 63–67 yo) and gender (47% F). The lateral group had more complex cases with higher COFAS type arthritis. Comparing the two groups, a total of 40 reoperations (7 anterior, 33 lateral) occurred in 27 patients (5A, 22L). One patient had up to four related reoperations. The only revision was in the anterior group. The only soft tissue reconstruction was an STSG in the lateral group. Nine reoperations were irrigation debridement related to an infective process (3 A, 6L). The majority (19/33) of reoperations in the lateral group were gutter debridement (8) or lateral hardware removal (11). Operative time was not statistically different. The odds ratio of having a reoperation with a laterally based TAR was 6.19 compared to the anterior group.

This retrospective study outlines the intermediate results at two years of lateral and anterior total ankle replacements. This is a first study of this kind in the literature. This study did show that there were more reoperations after a laterally-based TAR than an anterior TAR, recognizing the significant case complexity imbalance between groups. This speaks to the relative increase resource utilization of laterally based TAR patients. Both implant designs carry different reoperation rates favoring the anterior group however larger prospective datasets will be needed with patient-reported outcome.


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