Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery and Research | 2021

Letter to the Editors regarding the article “Patellar resurfacing in primary total knee arthroplasty: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials”

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


To the Editor: We read with great interest in the article by Chen et al. [1] regarding the “Patellar resurfacing versus nonresurfacing in total knee arthroplasty: an updated meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials”. We congratulate the authors for publishing their study in this journal. Coincidentally, we did a systematic review on the same topic in December 2020. We appreciate the interesting observation of Chen’s conclusion, and after reading their article, we would like to provide our results for discussion and highlight the difference that remains exploring. First, the authors searched electronic databases (MEDLINE, Ovid, and Cochrane Library databases), but other unpublished databases like grey literature, which may have more eligible studies were not included. In their study, 32 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) with 6887 knees were analyzed while a total of 52 RCTs (6066 in the patellar resurfacing (PR) group; 7180 in the non-patellar resurfacing (NPR) group) were reported in ours. In their article, Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS), Knee Society Score (KSS), function score, noise, revision rate, anterior knee pain (AKP), visual analog score (VAS), range of motion (ROM), Oxford score, Feller score, and patient satisfaction were reported. In our study, surgery length, blood loss, complications (including patellar clunk, patellar crepitus), mortality, and cost-effective analysis were supplied. They did subgroup analysis and divided the patients into two groups: (1) ≤ 3 years and (2) ≥ 5 years. While in our study, subgroup analysis based on short-term results (< 1 year), middle-term (2 to 5 years), and long-term results (6 to 10 years) were reported, and diagnosis-based subgroup analysis was also used. Second, there existed some difference between the results of Chen and us. the author concluded that the PR group reduced the occurrence of reoperation and noise after surgery, and improved the KSS function scores, while no significant difference in AKP, ROM, Oxford score, KOOS, VAS, Feller score, patellar tilt angle, and the patient satisfaction was found. However, in our study, similar to Teel et al. [2], KSS was not influenced by the two techniques. We also found that the event of AKP was similar in the subgroup of patients with osteoarthritis (OA), while higher in the NPR group in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Subgroup analysis based on follow-up points found that the PR group had higher KSS scores than the NPR group within 1 year, between 2 and 5 years, while no difference between 6 and 10 years. It suggested the PR group might be more cost-saving than NPR in the short to long term [3–5].

Volume 16
Pages None
DOI 10.1186/s13018-021-02307-7
Language English
Journal Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery and Research

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