Hazard of Failed Nonoperative Management for Symptomatic Accessory Navicular in Children and Adolescents: A Population-Based Case-Cohort Study.

Autor: Nguyen HB; Harvard Medical School.; Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA., Miller P; Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA., Mahan S; Harvard Medical School.; Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA., Spencer S; Harvard Medical School.; Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA., Micheli L; Harvard Medical School.; Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA., Kasser J; Harvard Medical School.; Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA., May C; Harvard Medical School.; Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Journal of pediatric orthopedics [J Pediatr Orthop] 2024 Oct 01; Vol. 44 (9), pp. e809-e815. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jun 19.
DOI: 10.1097/BPO.0000000000002754
Abstrakt: Background: The accessory navicular (AN) is an idiopathic condition of the foot present in 4% to 21% of the population. Most ANs remain asymptomatic, but children and adolescents who develop symptoms can have remarkably reduced quality of life. Although many respond to conservative measures, surgery is occasionally needed. Our purpose was to determine factors associated with the failure of nonoperative management.
Methods: This single-institution retrospective case-cohort study included patients up to age 19 years presenting between 2000 and 2021 with symptomatic AN and treated with standard-of-care. All 298 surgical cases, indicating failed nonoperative treatment, were included. For the subcohort, 299 patients were randomly sampled from all eligible patients, regardless of treatment. Baseline characteristics were summarized for the surgical cases and subcohort. Proportional hazards assumptions were checked and stratification implemented when necessary. Marginal structural proportional hazard modeling was used to estimate hazard ratios with 95% confidence intervals via inverse probability and LinYing weighting methods.
Results: The 298 surgical cases failed nonoperative management at a median of 5.2 months (IQR, 2.0-11.6 mo). In the subcohort, 86 failures of nonoperative management and 213 nonfailures constituted a 28.8% surgery rate. In both cohorts, nearly all patients played sports. Univariate proportional hazard modeling found older age ( P =0.02) and activity limitation ( P <0.001) at presentation, female sex ( P =0.002), higher BMI ( P =0.01), AN on the right ( P <0.001), and bone marrow edema of the AN ( P <0.001) and navicular body ( P <0.001) on MRI were associated with increased hazard of nonoperative failure. Nearly all of the surgical cohort reported improvement in pain (278/296, 94%) and returned to their primary sport (236/253, 93%) after surgery. Most also experienced full resolution of symptoms (187/281, 67%).
Conclusions: Symptomatic AN predominantly affects female athletes, leading to surgery in 28.8% of our subcohort. Conservative treatment may be less successful-and therefore surgery could be more strongly considered-in older age, activity limitation at presentation, female sex, higher BMI, right-sided AN, and bone marrow edema on MRI. Surgery is effective for symptomatic and functional improvement.
Level of Evidence: Case-cohort-Level III.
Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
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Databáze: MEDLINE