Medicine | 2019
Large deformity correction in medial open-wedge high tibial osteotomy may cause degeneration of patellofemoral cartilage
Abstract
Abstract To evaluate retrospectively any association between the degree of deformity correction by medial open-wedge high tibial osteotomy (HTO) and patellofemoral joint degeneration. We hypothesized that development of patellofemoral joint degeneration depended on the degree of intraoperative deformity correction. Fifty-seven patients who underwent medial open-wedge HTO for treatment of osteoarthritis in one knee were included in this study. Knees were classified into degeneration (D) and non-degeneration (ND) groups according to worsening of the patellar and/or femoral trochlear cartilage at the time of hardware removal (D group, 27 knees) and no degeneration or improvement (ND group, 30 knees). We compared pre- to post-surgery change in hip-knee-ankle angle (HKA) and medial-proximal-tibial angle (MPTA), open-wedge HTO correction angle, and arthroscopic findings between groups. Mean age, height, weight, and body mass index were 54.1\u200a±\u200a9.9 years, 160.4\u200a±\u200a8.7\u200acm, 66.4\u200a±\u200a12.1\u200akg, and 25.7\u200a±\u200a3.3\u200akg/m2, respectively. Change in both HKA and MPTA differed significantly between groups. The MPTA cut-off values to predict patellofemoral degeneration were determined to be 10°, associated with an AUC of 0.75 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.62–0.87). This study evaluated retrospectively the effect of the correction angle during medial open-wedge HTO on patellofemoral joint degeneration. If deformity correction exceeds an MPTA of 10° during open-wedge HTO, degeneration of patellofemoral joint needs to be considered. Level of evidence: Level IV.