Abstract
Background
Since 2011, the knee service at the Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre has been offering a neutralising medial opening wedge high tibial osteotomy (HTO) to a group of patients presenting with early medial osteoarthritis of the knee, varus alignment and symptoms for more than 2 years. During development of this practice an association was observed between this phenotype of osteoarthritis and the presence of CAM deformity at the hip.
Methods
A retrospective cohort study. All patients who underwent HTO since 2011 were identified (n=30). Comparator groups were used in order to establish whether meaningful observations were being made: Control group: The spouses of a high-risk osteoarthritis cohort recruited for a different study at our unit (n=20) Pre-arthroplasty group: Patients who have undergone uni-compartmental arthroplasty (UKA) for antero-medial osteoarthritis (n=20)All patients had standing bilateral full-length radiographs available for analysis using in house developed Matlab-based software for hip measurements and MediCAD for lower limb alignment measurements.
Results
A total of 140 limbs from 70 gender-matched subjects were studied. The HTO group had a significantly higher prevalence of CAM lesions defined by an Alpha angle >650. They also had a significantly greater mean alpha angle than both the pre-arthroplasty and control groups [HTO (Avg. 68.3 (±16.1)) vs Pre-arthroplasty (Avg. 59.5 (±15.5)) P=0.01; HTO vs Control (Avg. 58.2 (±13.9)) P=0.007].
Conclusions
The results of this study confirm that our HTO group have a significantly greater prevalence of CAM lesions. A feature not seen in either pre-arthroplasty or control subjects. This group demonstrate independent predictors for progression of OA in both the hip and the knee. To our knowledge this is a novel observation.
Level of evidence
Observational cohort study (III)