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The role of acromioplasty when repairing rotator cuff tears – no difference in pain or functional outcome at 24 months in a cohort of 2,441 patients

Abstract
AIM: The role acromioplasty with rotator cu repair remains unclear. This study aims to test the null hypothesis—that acromioplasty in conjunction with rotator cuff repair has no effect on improvement in pain or shoulder function at two years follow up. METHODS: Data was obtained from a collaborative nationwide project between March 2009 and December 2010, and consisted of a total of 2,441 patients undergoing primary repair of superior rotator cuff tears. Multivariate analysis was performed to assess the effect of the inclusion of acromioplasty at the time of rotator cuff repair on visual analogue scale (VAS) pain scores and Flex Shoulder Function (Flex SF) scores at 24-month follow up. RESULTS: On univariate analysis there was a significantly higher Flex SF score in the acromioplasty group (40.5) compared to the no acromioplasty group (38.7) and a lower mean pain score at 24 months in the acromioplasty group (1.44 vs 1.74). There was a significant difference in tear area and surgical repair technique between the two groups. On multivariate analysis there was no statistically significant difference in Flex SF or VAS pain scores between the two groups. CONCLUSION: There was no difference in pain or function scores at two years following rotator cuff repair regardless of whether or not acromioplasty was performed. This paper represents the largest study to date comparing acromioplasty to no acromioplasty in the setting of cuff repair. It supports previous literature in showing no significant difference in pain or shoulder function between the two groups.
Type
Journal Article
Type of thesis
Series
Citation
Bond, E. C., Maher, A., Hunt, L. A., Leigh, W., Brick, M., Young, S. W., & Caughey, M. (2017). The role of acromioplasty when repairing rotator cuff tears – no difference in pain or functional outcome at 24 months in a cohort of 2,441 patients. New Zealand Medical Journal, 130(1458).
Date
2017
Publisher
New Zealand Medical Association
Degree
Supervisors
Rights
This is an author’s accepted version of an article published in the journal: New Zealand Medical Journal. © NZMA.