Patellar resurfacing was not associated with a clinically significant advantage when a modern patellar friendly total knee arthroplasty is employed: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Modern total knee arthroplasty (TKA) femoral components are designed to provide a more optimal articular surface for the patella whether or not it has been resurfaced. Previous systematic reviews comparing outcomes of patellar resurfacing and no resurfacing combine both historic and modern designs....

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Veröffentlicht in:The knee 2023-03, Vol.41, p.329-341
Hauptverfasser: Simpson, Cameron JRW, Ng, Nathan, Ndou, Solomon, Wright, Evan, Yap, Ngee Jin, Scott, Chloe E H, Clement, Nick D
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Modern total knee arthroplasty (TKA) femoral components are designed to provide a more optimal articular surface for the patella whether or not it has been resurfaced. Previous systematic reviews comparing outcomes of patellar resurfacing and no resurfacing combine both historic and modern designs. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of patellar resurfacing in modern “patellar friendly” implants on (1) incidence of anterior knee pain, (2) patient reported outcomes (3) complication rates, and (4) reoperation rates compared with unresurfaced patellae in primary TKA. MEDline, PubMed and google scholar studies were evaluated using SIGN assessment tool and data analysis was conducted using Review Manager 5.2 on only randomised controlled trials. The search terms were: arthroplasty, replacement, knee (Mesh), TKA, prosthesis, patella, patellar resurfacing, patellar retaining. Thirty-two randomised controlled studies were identified that reported the type of TKA implant used: 11 used modern “patellar friendly” implants; and 21 older “patellar non-friendly” implants. Among “patellar friendly” TKAs there were no significant differences in anterior knee pain rates between resurfaced and unresurfaced groups. Patellar resurfacing with “patellar friendly” implants had significantly higher clinical (mean difference (MD) −0.77, p = 0.007) and functional (MD −1.87, p 
ISSN:0968-0160
1873-5800
DOI:10.1016/j.knee.2023.01.021