Perthes' disease (PD) is a relatively rare syndrome of idiopathic osteonecrosis of the proximal femoral epiphysis. Treatment for Perthes' disease is controversial due to the many options available, with no clear superiority of one treatment over another. Despite having few evidence-based approaches, many patients with Perthes' disease are managed surgically. Positive outcome reporting, defined as reporting a study variable producing statistically significant positive (beneficial) results, is a phenomenon that can be considered a proxy for the strength of science. This study aims to conduct a systematic literature review with the hypothesis that positive outcome reporting is frequent in studies on the treatment of Perthes' disease. We conducted a systematic review of all available abstracts associated with manuscripts in English or with English translation between January 2000 and December 2021, dealing with the treatment of Perthes' disease. Data collection included various study characteristics, surgical versus non-surgical management, treatment modality, mean follow-up time, analysis methods, and clinical recommendations.Aims
Methods
We performed a meta-analysis of modern total
joint replacement (TJR) to determine the post-operative mortality and
the cause of death using different thromboprophylactic regimens
as follows: 1) no routine chemothromboprophylaxis (NRC); 2) Potent
anticoagulation (PA) (unfractionated or low-molecular-weight heparin, ximelagatran,
fondaparinux or rivaroxaban); 3) Potent anticoagulation combined
(PAC) with regional anaesthesia and/or pneumatic compression devices
(PCDs); 4) Warfarin (W); 5) Warfarin combined (WAC) with regional anaesthesia
and/or PCD; and 6) Multimodal (MM) prophylaxis, including regional
anaesthesia, PCDs and aspirin in low-risk patients. Cause of death
was classified as autopsy proven, clinically certain or unknown.
Deaths were grouped into cardiopulmonary excluding pulmonary embolism
(PE), PE, bleeding-related, gastrointestinal, central nervous system,
and others (miscellaneous). Meta-analysis based on fixed effects
or random effects models was used for pooling incidence data. In all, 70 studies were included (99 441 patients; 373 deaths).
The mortality was lowest in the MM (0.2%) and WC (0.2%) groups.
The most frequent cause of death was cardiopulmonary (47.9%), followed
by PE (25.4%) and bleeding (8.9%). The proportion of deaths due
to PE was not significantly affected by the thromboprophylaxis regimen (PA, 35.5%;
PAC, 28%; MM, 23.2%; and NRC, 16.3%). Fatal bleeding was higher
in groups relying on the use of anticoagulation (W, 33.8%; PA, 9.4%;
PAC, 10.8%) but the differences were not statistically significant. Our study demonstrated that the routine use of PA does not reduce
the overall mortality or the proportion of deaths due to PE.