Is combined surgical dislocation and proximal femoral osteotomy a safe procedure for correction of complex hip deformities?

Author:

Parilla Frank W1,Nepple Jeffrey J1,Pashos Gail E1,Schoenecker Perry L1,Clohisy John C1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine , Campus Box 8233, 660 S. Euclid Ave., Saint Louis, MO 63110, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Complex deformities of the hip requiring intra-articular and proximal femoral correction are challenging with regard to surgical access and complication risk. Combined surgical dislocation and proximal femoral osteotomy (SD/PFO) is a surgical strategy that provides unrestricted access to the joint with the capability for adjunctive PFO. Although providing excellent surgical access, concerns over a potentially high risk of postoperative complications remain, and published information on the safety of this technique remain scarce. In this study, we defined the early complication profile of combined surgery across 48 hips with a variety of complex deformities using a standardized, validated complication grading scheme for hip preservation surgery. Patients were mean age 19.1 years 13–33 years and 60% had previous surgery. At the early mean follow-up of 2.9 years, considerable improvement was seen across all outcome scores. Major complications (Grade III or higher) occurred at a rate of 4.2% (n = 2). Both were osteotomy non-unions, and both were treated successfully with revision PFO and bone grafting at mean 1.1 years. To our knowledge, the current series of combined SD-PFO surgeries represents the largest to date for which detailed complication data have been reported. Given the complexity of these disorders, a major complication rate of 4.2% is acceptable. Our complication rates were comparable to those reported for isolated SD and PFO procedures. These rates did not vary significantly across morphologic variants or patient-specific characteristics. Additionally, our complication risk profile is consistent with previous, smaller reports, which supports the generalizability of these results among appropriately experienced surgeons.

Funder

Jacqueline & W. Randolph Baker Fellowship Fund

Curing Hip Disease Fund

Foundation for Barnes-Jewish Hospital

Once Upon A Time Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science

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