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Treatment of femoroacetabular impingement: a systematic review

  • Hip Arthroscopy (SJ Nho and HD Martin, Section Editors)
  • Published:
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Abstract

The purpose of this review is to determine if there is a difference in outcomes after: (1) nonsurgical vs surgical treatment of FAI; (2a) surgical dislocation with greater trochanteric osteotomy, (2b) anterior mini-open, (2c) arthroscopic plus mini-open, and (2d) arthroscopic surgery for FAI; (3) difference in complication and re-operation rates; and (4a) labral refixation and (4b) labral debridement for labral injuries. A systematic review of multiple databases was performed after PROSPERO registration and using PRISMA guidelines. Level I-IV evidence clinical studies with minimum 2-year follow-up were included. Data were compared using 2-sample and 2-proportion Z-test calculators. Study methodological quality was analyzed using Modified Coleman Methodology Score (MCMS). Recommendations were made using SORT (Strength Of Recommendation Taxonomy). Twenty-nine studies were included (2369 subjects; 2507 hips). MCMS was poor. Mean subject age was 34.4+/−8.4 years and mean follow-up was 3.1+/−0.9 years. Statistically significant differences were observed following both nonsurgical and surgical treatment, with greater (P < 0.05) improvements following surgery (SORT B), without consistent significant differences observed between different surgical techniques (SORT C). There was a greater (P < 0.05) reoperation and complication rate following surgical dislocation vs mini-open and arthroscopic techniques (SORT A). Clinical outcomes were significantly better (P < 0.05) following labral refixation vs debridement (SORT B). Outcomes of operative treatment of femoroacetabular impingement are significantly better than nonsurgical management. Surgical treatment significantly improves outcomes, with no consistent significant differences exhibited between open and arthroscopic techniques. Open surgical dislocation has significantly greater reoperation and complication rates vs mini-open and arthroscopic techniques. Outcomes of labral refixation are significantly better than debridement in patients with labral injuries.

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Conflict of Interest

Shane J. Nho is a paid consultant for Stryker, Pivot, and Ossur.

Joshua D. Harris declares that he has no conflict of interest.

Brandon J. Erickson declares that he has no conflict of interest.

Charles A. Bush-Joseph declares that he has no conflict of interest.

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This article does not contain any studies with human or animal subjects performed by any of the authors.

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Correspondence to Joshua D. Harris.

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Harris, J.D., Erickson, B.J., Bush-Joseph, C.A. et al. Treatment of femoroacetabular impingement: a systematic review. Curr Rev Musculoskelet Med 6, 207–218 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12178-013-9172-0

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