Prevalence and radiological definitions of acetabular dysplasia after the age of 2 years: a systematic review

Author:

de Vos-Jakobs Suzanne1,Boel Fleur1,Bramer Wichor M.2,Bierma-Zeinstra Sita M.A.1,Agricola Rintje13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, Erasmus MC – Sophia Children’s Hospital, University Medical Centre Rotterdam

2. Medical Library, University Medical Centre Rotterdam, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam

3. Department of Orthopaedics, St. Anna Hospital, Geldrop, The Netherlands

Abstract

Acetabular dysplasia is one of the most common causes of early hip osteoarthritis and hip replacement surgery. Recent literature suggests that acetabular dysplasia does not always originate at infancy, but can also develop later during childhood. This systematic review aims to appraise the literature on prevalence numbers of acetabular dysplasia in children after the age of 2 years. A systematic search was performed in several scientific databases. Publications were considered eligible for inclusion if they presented prevalence numbers on acetabular dysplasia in a general population of healthy children aged 2–18 years with description of the radiological examination. Quality assessment was done using the Newcastle-Ottawa score. Acetabular dysplasia was defined mild when: the center-edge angle of Wiberg (CEA-W) measured 15–20°, the CEA-W ranged between -1 to -2SD for age, or based on the acetabular index using thresholds from the Tönnis table. Severe dysplasia was defined by a CEA-W < 15°, <-2SD for age, or acetabular index according to Tönnis. Of the 1837 screened articles, four were included for review. Depending on radiological measurement, age and reference values used, prevalence numbers for mild acetabular dysplasia vary from 13.4 to 25.6% and for severe acetabular dysplasia from 2.2 to 10.9%. Limited literature is available on prevalence of acetabular dysplasia in children after the age of 2 years. Prevalence numbers suggest that acetabular dysplasia is not only a condition in infants but also highly prevalent later in childhood.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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