Mild or Borderline Hip Dysplasia: Are We Characterizing Hips With a Lateral Center-Edge Angle Between 18° and 25° Appropriately?

Author:

McClincy Michael P.1,Wylie James D.2,Yen Yi-Meng1,Novais Eduardo N.1

Affiliation:

1. Child and Young Adult Hip Preservation Program, Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

2. The Orthopedic Specialty Hospital, Intermountain Healthcare, Murray, Utah, USA

Abstract

Background: Controversy surrounds the classification and treatment of hips with a lateral center-edge angle (LCEA) between 18° and 25°. It remains undetermined as to whether periacetabular osteotomy (PAO) or arthroscopic surgery is best used to treat this patient population. Hypothesis: Patients with hip pain and mild or borderline acetabular dysplasia defined by an LCEA between 18° and 25° have different features of acetabular and femoral morphology, as determined by other relevant radiographic measures assessing the anterior and posterior acetabular walls, anterior coverage of the femoral head by the acetabulum, and femoral head and neck junction sphericity. Study Design: Cross-sectional study; Level of evidence, 3. Methods: A retrospective review of patients who had an LCEA between 18° and 25° undergoing hip preservation between January 2010 and December 2015 with either PAO or hip arthroscopic surgery was performed. Anteroposterior, Dunn lateral, and false profile radiographs were used to measure the LCEA, Tönnis angle, anterior center-edge angle (ACEA), anterior wall index (AWI) and posterior wall index (PWI), femoral epiphyseal acetabular roof (FEAR) index and posterior to anterior wall index, and alpha angle and femoral neck-shaft angle. An agglomerative hierarchical clustering analysis was then performed on the continuous radiographic variables to identify different subtypes of hip pathomorphology among the study cohort. There were sex-specific trends in hip morphology. Therefore, we proceeded to perform separate cluster analyses for each sex. Multivariate logistic regression was used to identify radiographic parameters for distinguishing between female patients who underwent hip arthroscopic surgery versus PAO. Results: Ninety-eight patients with hip pain and an LCEA between 18° and 25° underwent surgery in the study period, 77 (78%) were female, and 81 (82%) had complete radiographs for cluster analyses. The mean age was 22.6 years. Hip arthroscopic surgery was performed in 40 (41%) patients, and PAO was performed in 58 (59%) patients. The ACEA (45%), FEAR index (34%), and AWI (30%) were the most commonly abnormal radiographic parameters among all patients. In female patients, the ACEA (55%), FEAR index (42%), and AWI (34%) were the most commonly abnormal radiographic parameters. In male patients, the PWI (48%) was the most common radiographic abnormality. For female patients, 3 clusters representing different patterns of hip morphology were identified: acetabular deficiency with cam morphology, lateral acetabular deficiency, and anterolateral acetabular deficiency. For male patients, 3 clusters were also identified: posterolateral acetabular deficiency with global cam morphology, posterolateral acetabular deficiency with focal cam morphology, and lateral acetabular deficiency without cam morphology. The ACEA (odds ratio [OR], 47.7 [95% CI, 9.6-237.6]; P < .001) and AWI (OR, 3.9 [95% CI, 1.0-15.0]; P = .049) were identified as independent factors predicting which procedure was performed in female patients. Conclusion: A comprehensive evaluation of radiographic parameters in patients with an LCEA between 18° and 25° identified sex-specific trends in hip morphology and showed a large proportion of dysplastic features among these patients. An isolated assessment of the LCEA is an oversimplistic approach that may jeopardize appropriate classification and may provide insufficient data to guide the treatment of hips with additional features of dysplasia and instability.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine

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