ROTATOR CUFF REPAIR IN THE PEDIATRIC POPULATION DISPLAYS FAVORABLE OUTCOMES: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW
Purpose
To systematically review the literature to determine the injury mechanisms, presentation, and timing of diagnosis for pediatric patients with intratendinous rotator cuff tears and to determine the efficacy of surgical intervention for affected patients.
Methods
PubMed, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), and Scopus were searched. Studies were included if they involved only pediatric patients, soft-tissue rotator cuff injuries managed surgically, and reported outcomes. Patient characteristics, injury mechanisms, physical examination and imaging findings, time to diagnosis, surgical technique, and treatment outcomes were extracted. Findings were descriptively analyzed with weighted means and proportions.
Results
Twenty-one studies comprising 78 patients were included. The age range was 8 to 17 years and 57 were male. The supraspinatus (n = 56) was the most injured tendon. American football was the most reported sport played at the time of injury. Most patients were diagnosed within 6 months of injury via magnetic resonance imaging. Arthroscopic management was undertaken in 68 patients. Forty-six of 51 patients for whom data were available returned to sports at a range of 2.5 to 12 months postoperatively. Repair failure occurred in three patients.
Conclusions
The extant literature regarding rotator cuff tears in pediatric patients is limited to reports of low methodological quality. Qualitative synthesis of this low-level literature reveals that rotator cuff tears are mostly reported in male collision sport athletes but may also occur in female athletes and/or throwing athletes. These injuries are often successfully managed via arthroscopic repair, and patients and their families can be reassured that the majority of patients return to sports following surgery.
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Published April 2022 in Arthroscopy, Sports Medicine, and Rehabilitation (Issue 4).