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Bone metabolism is a key factor for clinical outcome of tibial plateau fractures

Matthias Krause, Lena Alm, Markus T. Berninger, Christoph Domnick, Kai Fehske, Karl‐Heinz Frosch, Elmar Herbst, Alexander Korthaus, Michael J. Raschke, Reinhard Hoffmann

2020European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE: Given that tibial plateau fractures (TPF) are rare, they may pose a challenge to the treating surgeon due to their variety of complex fracture patterns. Numerous studies have identified potential fracture-specific, surgery-related, and patient-related risk factors for impaired patient outcomes. However, reports on the influence of bone metabolism on functional outcomes are missing. METHODS: In a retrospective multicenter cohort study, 122 TPF of 121 patients were analyzed with respect to radiological and clinical outcomes (Rasmussen) with a mean follow-up of 35.7 ± 24.9 months. The risk factor assessment included bone metabolism-affecting comorbidities and medication. RESULTS: The findings showed that 95.9% of the patients reported a good-to-excellent clinical outcome, and 97.4% reported a good-to-excellent radiological outcome. Logistic regression revealed that potentially impaired bone metabolism (IBM) was an independent risk factor for the clinical (p = 0.016) but not the radiological outcome (Table 4). Patients with 41-type B fractures and a potential IBM had a seven times higher risk to present a fair-to-poor clinical outcome [OR 7.45, 95 CI (4.30, 12.92)]. The most common objective impairment was a limited range of motion in 16.4% of the patients, especially in 41-type C fractures (p = 0.06). The individual failure analysis additionally identified surgery-related options for improvement. CONCLUSION: This study demonstrated that potential IBM was an independent risk factor for a poor-to-fair clinical outcome.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineLogistic regressionRadiological weaponTibial plateau fractureSports medicineBone remodelingRisk factorRetrospective cohort studyInternal medicineSurgeryPhysical therapyInternal fixationBone fractures and treatmentsHip and Femur FracturesBone health and osteoporosis research