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Italian consensus statement for the use of allografts in ACL reconstructive surgery

Authors :
Ezio Adriani
Claudio Mazzola
Mario Ronga
Alberto Gobbi
Araldo Causero
Enrico Arnaldi
Andrea Fabio Manunta
Paolo Adravanti
Corrado Bait
Herbert Schönhuber
Giacomo Zanon
Andrea Ferretti
Massimo Berruto
Vincenzo Madonna
Riccardo Compagnoni
Andrea Tecame
Piero Volpi
Rocco Papalia
Maristella Farè
Filippo Familiari
Giuseppe Milano
Raul Zini
Giacomo Stefani
Stefano Zaffagnini
Matteo Denti
F. Benazzo
Giovanni Bonaspetti
Luigi Adriano Pederzini
Gian Luigi Canata
Marco Fravisini
Pier Paolo Canè
Claudio Zorzi
Pier Paolo Mariani
Pietro Randelli
Francesco Giron
Giancarlo Coari
Paolo Ferrua
Flavio Quaglia
Bait, Corrado
Randelli, Pietro
Compagnoni, Riccardo
Ferrua, Paolo
Papalia, Rocco
Familiari, Filippo
Tecame, Andrea
Adravanti, Paolo
Adriani, Ezio
Arnaldi, Enrico
Benazzo, Franco
Berruto, Massimo
Bonaspetti, Giovanni
Canata, Gian Luigi
Canè, Pier Paolo
Causero, Araldo
Coari, Giancarlo
Denti, Matteo
Farè, Maristella
Ferretti, Andrea
Fravisini, Marco
Giron, Francesco
Gobbi, Alberto
Madonna, Vincenzo
Manunta, Andrea
Mariani, Pier Paolo
Mazzola, Claudio
Milano, Giuseppe
Pederzini, Luigi
Quaglia, Flavio
Ronga, Mario
Schönhuber, Herbert
Stefani, Giacomo
Volpi, Piero
Zanon, Giacomo
Zini, Raul
Zorzi, Claudio
Zaffagnini, Stefano
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Purpose: Graft choice for primary anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACL-R) is debated, with considerable controversy and variability among surgeons. Autograft tendons are actually the most used grafts for primary surgery; however, allografts have been used in greater frequency for both primary and revision ACL surgery over the past decade. Given the great debate on the use of allografts in ACL-R, the “Allografts for Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction” consensus statement was developed among orthopedic surgeons and members of SIGASCOT (Società Italiana del Ginocchio, Artroscopia, Sport, Cartilagine, Tecnologie Ortopediche), with extensive experience in ACL-R, to investigate their habits in the use of allograft in different clinical situations. The results of this consensus statement will serve as benchmark information for future research and will help surgeons to facilitate the clinical decision making. Methods: In March 2017, a formal consensus process was developed using a modified Delphi technique method, involving a steering group (9 participants), a rating group (28 participants) and a peer-review group (31 participants). Nine statements were generated and then debated during a SIGASCOT consensus meeting. A manuscript has been then developed to report methodology and results of the consensus process and finally approved by all steering group members. Results: A different level of consensus has been reached among the topics selected. Strong agreement has been reported in considering harvesting, treatment and conservation methods relevant for clinical results, and in considering biological integration longer in allograft compared to autograft. Relative agreement has been reported in using allograft as the first-line graft for revision ACL-R, in considering biological integration a crucial aspect for rehabilitation protocol set-up, and in recommending a delayed return to sport when using allograft. Relative disagreement has been reported in using allograft as the first-line graft for primary ACL-R in patients over 50, and in not considering clinical results of allograft superior to autograft. Strong disagreement has been reported in using allograft as the first-line graft for primary ACL-R and for skeletally immature patients. Conclusions: Results of this consensus do not represent a guideline for surgeons, but could be used as starting point for an international discussion on use of allografts in ACL-R. Level of evidence: IV, consensus of experts.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9a156b58c718397e92d04fd84eaa0a0b