Article Text
Abstract
Background No gold standard exists for identifying successful outcomes 1 and 2 years after operative and non-operative management of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury. This limits the ability of a researcher and clinicians to compare and contrast the results of interventions.
Purpose To establish a consensus based on expert consensus of measures that define successful outcomes 1 and 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction.
Methods Members of international sports medicine associations, including the American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine, the European Society for Sports Traumatology, Surgery, and Knee Arthroscopy and the American Physical Therapy Association, were sent a survey via email. Blinded responses were analysed for trends with frequency counts. A summed importance percentage (SIP) was calculated and 80% SIP operationally indicated consensus.
Results 1779 responses were obtained. Consensus was achieved for six measures in operative and non-operative management: the absence of giving way, patient return to sports, quadriceps and hamstrings’ strength greater than 90% of the uninvolved limb, the patient having not more than a mild knee joint effusion and using patient-reported outcomes (PRO). No single PRO achieved consensus, but threshold scores between 85 and 90 were established for PROs concerning patient performance.
Conclusions The consensus identified six measures important for successful outcome after ACL injury or reconstruction. These represent all levels of the International Classification of Functioning: effusion, giving way, muscle strength (body structure and function), PRO (activity and participation) and return to sport (participation), and should be included to allow for comparison between interventions.
- ACL
- Evaluation
- Knee ACL
- Knee injuries
- Knee surgery
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Introduction
Criteria used to assess outcomes after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury address the physical and personal domains of the WHO's International Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health (WHO-ICF): impairments in body structure and function, activity limitations and participation restrictions. Joint effusion, joint laxity, muscle strength, functional performance tests and patient-reported outcomes (PROs) are used to determine the severity of the injury and track progress over time.1–5 The breadth of outcomes allows for researchers to identify whether or not their intervention was successful for the target measure (eg, quadriceps strength increased after strength training; anterior tibiofemoral laxity minimised with surgical reconstruction).
PROs specific to the knee joint and ACL injury with established validity, reliability and responsiveness abound.2 ,6 ,7 PROs measure patient perspective on how the knee joint affects daily life and sports activities,1 ,8 which has a greater influence on patient satisfaction than standard clinical measures.9 PROs are especially effective in comparing the results of interventions on patient perspective after injury, in both clinical practice and research.9 ,10 PROs fall into two major categories—self-reported patient performance scales which measure function and symptoms and activity level measures of the frequency of participation. Clinical performance-based outcomes such as quadriceps strength and functional hop testing capture different aspects of function than self-reported function.11 Therefore, a combination of outcome measures is likely necessary to provide a comprehensive evaluation of functional success.11 ,12
The research and clinical communities lack a gold standard definition of success. Each of the commonly used outcomes has its place in the continuum of care, although some outcome measures are not feasible in every practice or clinic, limiting their generalisability. Additionally, most of the outcomes do not have validated thresholds or normative data for defining success. An ideal outcome to identify success after injury should be easy to administer, generalisable to all clinical settings and target all realms of the health condition—body structure and function, activity and participation.1 Additionally, clearly defined scores for differentiating successful management from unsuccessful management should be established for each measure used.
Establishing a professional consensus definition of success is an important step forward in choosing outcome measures after ACL injury. This investigation sought expert consensus on a minimum set of outcomes to identify successful outcome 1 and 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction through an online survey. We also sought to similarly identify consensus expert consensus for threshold scores for those PROs that were considered important for identifying a successful outcome after ACL injury or reconstruction. We hypothesised that return to sport, absence of giving way, patient-reported measures of function, functional tests and quadriceps strength would be identified by a majority of respondents as important measures of successful outcome after ACL injury or reconstruction. We also hypothesised that measures of hamstrings’ strength, passive laxity, effusion and arthritis would not be identified as important measures of successful outcome 1 or 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction because these variables do not have a significant impact on function in the 1–2-year time frame. In the Discussion section, the empirical evidence in support of the measures will also be discussed.
Methods
Survey development and content
The Delaware-Oslo ACL Cohort Research Group developed a preliminary paper and pencil survey to identify important measures of successful outcomes 1 and 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction based on a literature review and the recommendation of experts in orthopaedic surgery (two surgeons with over 20 years of experience each) and physical therapy (two established principal investigators in the field of rehabilitation after ACL injury and reconstruction and four graduate students with a track record of publication and presentation in the same area). This survey was provided to attendees of the 2010 Congress of the European Society for Sports Traumatology, Knee Surgery and Arthroscopy (ESSKA). Based on 40 preliminary responses from orthopaedic surgeons and physical therapists at ESSKA 2010, the original survey was modified and a final online version of the survey was created complete with survey logic to minimise the response burden (see online supplementary appendix). Two screening questions were asked (1) ‘Do you use different criteria to identify successful outcome between those patients undergoing operative management and non-operative management?’ and (2) ‘Do you use different criteria to identify successful outcome at 1 and 2 years postintervention?’ If respondents used different criteria for operative and non-operative management, they were asked about each individually. If respondents used different criteria at 1 and 2 years postintervention, they were asked about each individually. The questions and the responses to them are illustrated in the flow chart in figure 1 Preliminary responses from ESSKA 2010 were not included in these results; however, these respondents were invited to participate in the final version.
All domains of the WHO-ICF were represented in the proposed criteria. The items chosen for inclusion in the survey are frequently used as outcome measures in clinical practice and research. Return to play is used as a measure of participation restrictions. Functional tests mimic the demands of play in controlled settings to identify activity limitations. Impairments in body structure and function are quantified with effusion measurements (a surrogate of inflammation), measures of laxity (arthrometry and the pivot-shift test) and instability (giving way of the knee), radiographic degeneration and muscle strength. Persistent effusion, excessive laxity, a positive pivot-shift and arthritis are all associated with poor self-reported outcomes and satisfaction after ACL injury.9 ,13–15 PROs measure patient perception on how their knee affects their participation, activity and body structure and function, as well as contextual factors.1 ,7
The proposed criteria are further defined in the online supplementary appendix and summarised in table 1 (with abbreviations used in figures and tables), per their role in the WHO-ICF guidelines. A rating scale was used to allow respondents to identify the relative importance of each criterion (table 2). The answer choices for each item were explicitly defined without the ability for the respondent to respond with a narrative. A free text general comment box was provided at the end of the survey.
Analysis of PRO measures
Respondents who indicated that PROs were of primary or secondary importance as a measure of successful outcome after ACL injury or reconstruction were asked to identify which of nine common PROs used after ACL injury were important measures of successful outcome. Respondents who indicated that a PRO was an important measure of successful outcome were asked a final follow-up free text question to identify threshold scores that indicate successful outcome after ACL injury or reconstruction. Several PROs demonstrate exceptional performance in reliability, validity and responsiveness and are available for the knee joint and ACL injuries.2 ,7 ,16 The individual PROs proposed were the Knee Outcome Survey—Activities of Daily Living Scale (KOS-ADLS), Knee Outcome Survey—Sports Activities Scale (KOS-SAS), Global rating of perceived function (GRS), Lysholm Score, International Knee Documentation Committee 2000 Subjective Knee Form (IKDC2000), Cincinnati Knee Score, Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS), (Patient Performance Measures) and the Tegner Activity Scale and Marx Activity Rating Scale (Activity Level Measures).
Populations
The survey was administered through a survey generating website (qualtrics.com; Qualtrics, Inc). The memberships of international sports medicine organisations were targeted: the American Orthopedic Society for Sports Medicine (AOSSM), the Sports Physical Therapy Section of the American Physical Therapy Association (SPTS) and ESSKA. Each organisation was polled through direct e-mail contact twice. Additionally, member organisations of the International Federation of Sports Physical Therapists and subscribers to the Journal of Orthopedic & Sports Physical Therapy were provided with the survey. Organisations who confirmed distribution to their membership are identified in table 3. It is not possible to determine true response rates for the smaller organisations due to unconfirmed distribution sizes. The data presented in table 3 are for the reference of the scope of distribution. Safeguards preventing the completion of the survey multiple times from the same internet location were used to limit the number of responses from the same individual.
Demographic data were collected including clinical discipline, country/continent of practice and years of experience. All respondents answered questions concerning successful outcome after operative management. Respondents were asked whether they allow patients with ACL deficiency to return to sports without reconstruction. If respondents indicated that they allowed non-operative return to sports, they answered questions concerning successful outcome after non-operative management. Surveys completed by individuals identifying themselves as orthopaedic surgeons, rehabilitation specialists (physical therapists and athletic trainers), researchers or other pertinent professions were included for analysis. Surveys from those deemed inappropriate to respond were excluded from the analysis (students, personal trainers, fitness professionals). To obtain a broad representation of the state of clinical practice, respondents who were in clinical practice were included regardless of years of clinical experience. We included these respondents as experts as they have received extensive training and are responsible for determining the outcomes of their patients, and thus are considered experts by their patients.
Survey analysis
Frequency counts for each question were analysed for trends. Criteria identified as having ‘Primary Importance’ and ‘Secondary Importance’ were operationally defined as positive. Criteria identified as ‘Not Important/Do Not Use’ were operationally defined as negative. Criteria identified as ‘Indifferent’ were operationally defined as having no impact on the overall value of a measure. Respondents who were unfamiliar with the measure were not used in the determination of importance. The overall importance of each criterion was based on a summed importance percentage considering perspectives on each measure:
An operational definition of 80% was used to identify consensus. An 80% threshold has been used previously to identify consensus in surveys of orthopaedic surgeons with a different rating scale.17 This study was approved by the Human Subjects Review Board at the University of Delaware.
Results
Respondents
Responses for the final online survey were obtained from 553 orthopaedic surgeons, 1132 rehabilitation specialists and 94 responding ‘other’ (researchers, sports medicine physicians), for a total of 1779 respondents. Responses were obtained from every continent (table 4). The average practice time of respondents was 14 years (1–45 years). Respondents belonged to over 125 professional organisations, with large representative samples from the targeted organisations: SPTS (6097 distributed, 665 returned, 11% response rate), AOSSM (2615 distributed, 338 returned, 13% response rate) and ESSKA (1378 distributed, 263 returned, 19%; table 5). Response rates for other organisations were not available as the number of surveys distributed was not available.
Outcome criteria
The vast majority of orthopaedic surgeons (89.2%) and rehabilitation specialists (97%) responded that they allow patients to return to sports without ACL reconstruction. Consensus was achieved for the same six measures in for both 1 and 2 years after operative and non-operative management encompassing the domains of the WHO-ICF: the absence of giving way, quadriceps and hamstrings’ strength greater than 90% of the uninvolved limb, the patient having no more than a mild-knee joint effusion (body structure and function), patient return to sports (participation) and using PROs (participation and activity) (table 6). Laxity measures, functional testing and measures of osteoarthritis did not achieve consensus. The majority of patients indicated that they used the same criteria for both operative and non-operative management (n=1044, 58.7%) and for one and 2 years post-intervention (n=1481, 83%); therefore, the results for operative and non-operative management and for 1 and 2 years are very similar (figure 1).
No PRO had a summed importance percentage that met the consensus criteria of 80% for any of the four time points in consideration. Of the survey respondents who indicated that PROs were an important measure of successful outcome after ACL injury or reconstruction, over 40% indicated that the GRS, KOS-ADLS, and KOS-SAS were important (table 7). Over 40% of respondents identified the Cincinnati Knee Score and the Marx Activity Rating Scale as being unimportant measures of successful outcome after ACL injury and reconstruction. 40% were unfamiliar with the Marx Activity Rating Scale.
For PROs of patient performance, median threshold scores for measuring a successful outcome 1 and 2 years after operative or non-operative management were between 85 and 90 with threshold scores skewed toward the higher end of the scale as indicated by the small IQRs (table 7). For the Tegner Activity Scale and Marx Activity Rating Scale (activity level measures), median threshold scores were identified as 7 (Competitive sports- tennis, running, motorcars speedway, handball; Recreational sports- soccer, football, rugby, ice hockey, basketball, squash, racquetball, running) and 12 (at least one time in a week for running, cutting, decelerating and pivoting on average), respectively.
Discussion
The purpose of this study was to establish a consensus based on expert consensus about measures to determine successful outcome 1 and 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction. Our hypotheses were largely supported. The absence of symptomatic knee joint instability, patient return to sports, quadriceps and hamstrings’ strength symmetry, the presence of no more than a mild-knee joint effusion and PROs were identified as important measures of successful outcome 1 and 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction. Functional tests, laxity measures and arthritis were not identified as important measures of successful outcome 1 or 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction. Although consensus was achieved that PROs are an important measure of successful outcome after ACL injury or reconstruction, consensus was not achieved for any individual PRO as being an indicator of successful outcome 1 or 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction. However, respondents identified median threshold scores between 85% and 90% for patient performance measures, and threshold scores that identified weekly participation at high levels for activity level measures.
Outcome criteria achieving consensus
Symptomatic instability is failure of both the passive ligamentous restraint and the active neuromuscular restraints to knee stability. Giving way is an inability to actively stabilise the ACL-deficient knee and a reinjury to the reconstructed knee. This instability potentially puts other structures in the knee at risk for injury, including the meniscus and collateral ligaments.18 ,19 A knee joint with multiple injuries leads to poorer outcomes in the long term, including poor self-report and increased arthritic changes.20–22 Therefore, recurrent instability is indicated as a primary reason to perform reconstruction and giving way serves as an important measure of successful outcome after both ACL injury and reconstruction.17
As the majority of ACL injuries occur during sport, it is likely that the patient's ultimate goal is to return to that sport.23–25 Therefore, patient return to sport status is a measure of the success of the surgical procedure and/or rehabilitation protocol, as well as a measure of patient satisfaction, and was identified as such. However, patient return to sport is influenced by contextual factors personal to the athlete and from the competitive environment, more so than the other measures in consideration in this study.24 Sport participation at preinjury levels may not be available due to life situations (graduation beyond the level at which skill level allows participation, time constraints due to work/school/family), personal choices and perspectives (fear of reinjury, changing sport) or environmental factors (no snow to downhill ski, too much snow to play soccer). Contextual factors may impact the participation of the patient, regardless of the functional performance capabilities of their knee joint. Additionally, patients may return to their sport of injury, but may not have the same ability as preinjury for any number of reasons including confidence and functional performance,23 which may indicate an unsuccessful management for the patient or medical team. Regardless of motivation, the simplicity of the patient self-reporting the ability to return to sport can be an extremely valuable measure of success 1 and 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction.
Our hypothesis that PROs would be identified as important measures of successful outcome 1 and 2 years after ACL injury and reconstruction was supported by our data. PROs are frequently used to report outcomes in large scale studies of knee injury, including registries and multicenter trials, due to well-established validity, reliability and responsiveness for these outcomes, as well as ease of application and standardisation.26–28 PROs measure various aspects of function and can be directly compared without clinician bias. Patient perception is a key element in determining whether or not an intervention was successful. The variation in PROs allows clinicians’ and researchers’ flexibility in choosing a measure for their population; however, the many PROs available make it difficult to compare across trials. Identifying the best measure available and encouraging its use would improve our ability to compare results. However, to truly measure global function, it is likely that a more comprehensive and representative measure is needed.
The GRS (also called the single assessment numeric evaluation (SANE)) was most frequently identified as an important measure of successful outcome 1 and 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction likely due to its simplicity of application and direct patient relevance. When dealing with an injured patient, returning to the preinjury functional level should be the goal. Using a SANE of current function relative to prior function quickly summarises patient functional status and correlates with other established PROs.29 The GRS can be framed to include activities of daily living and/or sports activities, encompassing multiple aspects of function. The two subscales of KOS were most commonly identified as important measures of successful outcome 1 and 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction, representing a global appreciation for patient function. Using the GRS and both subscales of the KOS analyses the function comprehensively from the patient perspective, supporting our hypothesis that PROs encompassing multiple aspects of function would be identified as important measures of successful outcome after ACL injury and reconstruction.
The IKDC2000 is similar to the two KOS subscales. It was developed with consideration of these measures and asks questions concerning activities of daily living and sport function.30 The IKDC2000 also has a question that asks the patient to rate knee function currently and prior to knee injury, similar to the GRS. The IKDC2000 is a valid and reliable measure of symptoms, daily function and sports activities, making it a robust measure of multiple aspects of function for comparison,30 addressing many of the symptoms and patient-reported responses identified by Kocher as being predictive of poor satisfaction, including pain, stiffness, swelling, instability, sport and ADL function and overall rating of knee joint function.9 This measure was not as frequently identified as being an important measure of successful outcome 1 and 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction, and a relatively high percentage of respondents were unfamiliar with it. Regardless, the IKDC2000 combines the aspects of the three PROs most commonly identified as important into one questionnaire, simplifying the process.
As an alternative to the IKDC2000, the KOOS also addresses daily function, symptoms, pain and sports participation. The KOOS has a quality of life subscale, which adds more information to the assessment of the patient's perspective. The KOOS is used in knee ligament registries and was the primary outcome measure in a randomised controlled trial of operative and non-operative management of ACL injuries.27 ,31
A median score of 90% was identified as a threshold to identify successful outcome after both ACL injury and reconstruction for the GRS, two subscales of the KOS and the IKDC2000. A median score of 85% was identified as the threshold to identify success for the KOOS. The IKDC2000 has the added benefit of having a normative data set to which the patients can be compared.32 This is an important distinction because most of the rating scales that are currently used have no well-defined score to identify success from failure or to stratify results. The comprehensive yet concise nature of the IKDC2000 with a normative database to compare patients led the authors to promote the use of the IKDC2000 to measure function after ACL injury or reconstruction.
The Tegner Activity Scale and Marx Activity Rating Scale provide different analyses of patient function after injury or reconstruction than the other PROs in this analysis. The Tegner Activity Scale and Marx Activity Rating Scale both classify patients according to their sport or leisure time participation, as opposed to the patient's self-reported perception of knee function. The Tegner Activity Scale provides an arbitrary ranking based on the level of sport and leisure time activities and/or competition at which the individual is currently participating.33 The Marx Activity Rating Scale quantifies the frequency of activities that challenge the dynamic stability of the knee over the past year.33 Both of these measures were frequently identified as an unimportant measure of successful outcome 1 and 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction, and many respondents were unfamiliar with them. No other PRO included in this analysis adequately measures activity level, which was identified as an important measure of successful outcome after ACL injury or reconstruction.
Quadriceps strength was identified as an important measure of successful outcome 1 and 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction, likely due to its relationship with future self-reported function and significant for long-term outcome.13 ,15 ,34 Many factors contribute to quadriceps strength deficits after ACL injury or reconstruction. Arthrogenic muscle inhibition, where joint changes result in an inability to volitionally activate the quadriceps, reduces functional strength.35 ,36 Inadequate rehabilitation of the quadriceps before surgery compounds the deficits seen after reconstruction.13 Preoperative strength deficits can be compounded by the choice of a patellar tendon graft source. This graft harvest can result in anterior knee pain and decreased quadriceps strength, especially in the short-term follow-up in consideration. As strength deficits can persist after injury37–39 and do not resolve without significant intervention,40 the measurement of quadriceps strength is an important measure of successful outcome 1 and 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction.
Hamstrings’ strength was also identified as an important measure of successful outcome 1 and 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction. While quadriceps strength is predictive of future function, hamstrings’ strength does not seem to be predictive of future function. Even when the hamstrings are used as a graft source for reconstruction, hamstrings’ strength recovers by 1 year41 ,42 although deficits are seen in some populations.43 Contrary to reports of no statistically significant relationship between hamstrings’ strength and function, this was identified as an important measure of successful outcome 1 and 2 years after ACL injury and reconstruction.
Measures of joint effusion are used as clinical surrogate measurements for joint inflammation.5 ,44 Effusion measured by clinicians may not be considered important in determining success, as a measure of effusion validated against the gold standard of joint aspiration has not been established. However, measures of effusion that have acceptable face validity and good inter-rater reliability are available.5 If the demand placed on the knee joint is too great for the joint to handle, inflammation and effusion may increase, indicating a joint incapable of current functional demands.45 Effusion may be expected for a few months after injury or reconstruction, but at the 1 and 2 year time frames, an effused joint is considered a negative outcome. Increased effusion, like poor quadriceps strength, can affect knee joint kinematics affecting participation in sports46 ,47 and can indirectly contribute to joint degeneration.
Outcome criteria not achieving consensus
Functional performance tests did not reach consensus levels as important measures of successful outcome 1 and 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction. Functional tests are designed to test balance or mimic the demands of on field performance such as jumping, cutting, pivoting, landing and running, and are typically used to identify poor performance which would preclude patients from returning to sport.48–50 The tests give the clinician a standardised method of evaluating performance of each athlete and benchmarking against normative data or their own clinical experiences, and are recommended as criteria that should be used for returning patients to sport.51 Quality and symmetry of movement and measureable performance between injured and uninjured limbs allow for consistent comparisons. Various methods have been described in the literature and used to test patients after an array of injuries. These tests are typically quick, and require little extra equipment to perform, making them ideally suited for clinical evaluation. Even though these tests allow for the quantification of performance in the clinic, their utility is not supported by a consensus rating.
Measures of passive knee laxity were not identified as being an important measure of successful outcome 1 and 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction. Laxity measures confirm the integrity of the graft and the amount of rotational laxity within the reconstructed knee joint. A positive pivot-shift test after reconstruction may be indicative of future joint degeneration.9 ,14 However, the amount of laxity does not relate to functional performance after injury,14 ,52 ,53 bringing into question why these measures are still used in the literature and clinical practice as important measures of successful outcome after ACL injury. After reconstruction, these tests can be used to determine the patency of the graft and the extent to which the graft is able to control motion; however, these results do not relate to function.
Measures of osteoarthritis were not identified as important measures of successful outcome 1 or 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction. Degeneration is not likely seen at 1 and 2 years postinjury as these changes take longer to develop. Between 0% and 13% of isolated ACL-injured patients have shown knee osteoarthritis more than 10 years after injury,54 indicating that the number of patients with measurable joint degeneration by conventional radiograph at 1 or 2 years after injury is likely very small. The prevention of osteoarthritis is a key factor in many interventions after ACL injury; however, it is not an important determinant of a successful outcome 1 or 2 years after injury or reconstruction.
Influence of evidence on practice
These results indicate that the available evidence does not impact clinical opinion in all cases. Despite a lack of published evidence linking hamstrings’ strength to functional performance after ACL injury and reconstruction, it was still identified as an important measure of successful outcome 1 and 2 years after ACL injury and reconstruction by more than 80% of the respondents. Similarly, the well-established, valid and reliable PROs that are used to measure function in the literature that is meant to shape practice were frequently identified as not important or were unfamiliar to the respondents. These gaps need to be continually addressed in the educational programmes and continued training of clinicians.
Limitations
Calculation of true response rates is not possible due to distribution methods. However, over 10% of members of AOSSM, ESSKA and SPTS responded. Each organisation distributed a link to the survey to their own membership, not allowing for the investigators to track how many surveys were distributed and how many were returned. The large, well-distributed sample (over 1700 responses) of different professions provides a representative sample for this analysis. A representative composite score was calculated to account for all respondents who had an opinion on the value of a measure, including those who did not find a measure to be important. The outcomes in this survey are frequently reported in the literature concerning ACL injury and reconstruction, thus they are mostly familiar to the clinicians polled. For this reason, the respondents who had a negative opinion of a measure were included in the calculation to mitigate the familiarity of the measures. Similarly, the authors removed the bias of those individuals unfamiliar with each measure from influencing the final composite score.
Conclusion
The respondents met the consensus definitions for six measures of knee function important for successful outcome 1 and 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction, representing all levels of the International Classification of Functioning: absence of knee joint effusion, absence of knee joint giving way, symmetrical quadriceps and hamstrings’ muscle strength (body structure and function), PROs with clearly defined thresholds for success (activity and participation) and return to sport (participation). Each of these, with the exception of hamstrings’ strength, is strongly supported by evidence. No individual PRO was identified by a consensus, although measures which take into account function in sports and activities of daily living were most frequently nominated. The Marx Activity Rating Scale clearly represents the participation level of patients in activities which challenge the ACL, but the results of this study do not clearly indicate that more clinicians use the Marx compared with the Tegner Activity Scale to measure activity level. These comprehensive measures should be included in clinical practice and research to allow for the comparison between patients and interventions and across countries.
What are the new findings?
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Five measures supported by empirical evidence were identified as important to identify successful outcomes 1 and 2 years after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury or reconstruction: the absence of giving way, patient return to sport status, the absence of knee joint effusion, quadriceps muscle strength symmetry and patient-reported outcomes (PROs). Hamstrings’ muscle strength symmetry was also identified as an important measure of successful outcome 1 and 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction despite a lack of empirical evidence relating hamstrings’ strength with functional outcome.
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Despite being identified as an important measure of successful outcome by a consensus of respondents, no individual PRO was identified as important by a consensus of respondents.
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Measures of ligament laxity and osteoarthritis were not identified as important measures of successful outcome 1 or 2 years after ACL injury or reconstruction.
How might it impact on clinical practice in the near future?
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A standard set of criteria identified by a consensus of clinicians and experts in the field was established as a possible reference standard for comparing results.
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Cut-off scores for functional patient reported outcomes were established between 85% and 90%, providing a goal for clinical practice.
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Less attention should be placed on standard measurements of laxity in determining the outcome of an anterior cruciate ligament rupture.
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank the organisations that facilitated our data collection by distributing the survey to their membership: the Sports Physical Therapy Section of the American Physical Therapy Association, the European Society for Sports Traumatology, Surgery and Knee Arthroscopy, the American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine, the Italian Manual Therapy Group, the Portuguese Sports Physiotherapy Group, the Irish Society of Chartered Physiotherapists, the Association of Turkish Sports Physiotherapists, the Swiss Sports Physiotherapy Association, the Italian Sport Specialist Group, the Association of Chartered Physiotherapists in Sports Medicine, the Norwegian Manual Therapy Association and the Journal of Orthopaedic & Sports Physical Therapy.
References
Supplementary materials
Supplementary Data
This web only file has been produced by the BMJ Publishing Group from an electronic file supplied by the author(s) and has not been edited for content.
Files in this Data Supplement:
- Data supplement 1 - Online supplement
- Data supplement 2 - Online appendix
Footnotes
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Contributors All authors were involved in the development of the survey, interpretation of the results and critical evaluation of the manuscript. DSL, HG and IE were involved in data collection. ADL was involved in the data collection, survey administration, data analysis and drafting of the manuscript. ADL is the guarantor.
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Funding This work was funded by a grant from the USA National Institutes of Health (NIH R01 HD37985).
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Competing interests None.
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Ethics approval University of Delaware Human Subjects Review Board.
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Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.
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Data sharing statement Additional data are being reserved for publication. It is not available to any entity at this time.