Litcius/Paper detail

Lateral Extra‐articular Procedures With Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction: International Consensus

Adnan Saithna, Andrew G. Geeslin, Bertrand Sonnery‐Cottet

2025Arthroscopy The Journal of Arthroscopic and Related Surgery12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The risk of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) graft failure is increased in select patient populations. Lateral extra-articular procedures including anterolateral ligament reconstruction and lateral extra-articular tenodesis seek to reduce ACL graft failure rates and more reliably restore normal knee kinematics. An international consensus meeting was convened in 2024, and through a modified Delphi consensus process, 53 international experts debated 20 surgical indications. A lateral extra-articular procedure was "strongly recommended" in patients undergoing ACL reconstruction with a hamstring autograft in young/active patients, patients with grade III pivot-shift findings, patients with knee hyperextension, and skeletally immature patients; it was "recommended" for revision ACL reconstruction and chronic ACL deficiency; and it "should be considered" in young/active patients receiving patellar or quadriceps tendon autografts, athletes returning to pivoting sports, patients with grade 3 Lachman findings, patients with a posterior tibial slope greater than 12°, and patients with a history of a contralateral ACL injury.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAnterior cruciate ligamentSurgeryHamstringLachman testAnterior Cruciate Ligament InjuriesAnterior cruciate ligament reconstructionPatellar tendonAnterior knee painArthroscopyAthletesAvulsionReturn to sportTendonPatellaLigamentTibiaSports medicineOrthopedic surgeryAvulsion fractureHamstring musclesKnee injuries and reconstruction techniques