Monday, January 19, 2026

One in ten revision rate, one in six complication rate for anatomic total shoulders, what can we learn? The immortal time bias.

 A recent article, Long-term functional and radiographic outcomes of anatomic total shoulder arthroplasty using an all-polyethylene cemented glenoid component with a minimum follow-up of 10 years, reported the minimum10 year outcomes for 54 of 129 patients (mean age 78, 55% female) having anatomic shoulder arthroplasty by an individual highly experienced surgeon between  2002 and 2014. Four different implants were used: Global Unite, Global AP, Global Advantage, and the Total Evolutive Shoulder System. 


From the authors: "A cemented onlay all-polyethylene pegged glenoid component was implanted, with reaming performed to achieve an inlay-style placement while ensuring osseous support at its borders. To avoid overstuffing, the humeral resection and the selection of the humeral head size were performed according to 
the native anatomy and tension. The humeral stem was implanted using a press-fit technique when bone quality allowed; otherwise, it was cemented."

Patients with minimum 10 year followup had favorable shoulder function, with a Constant Score of 63, an American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons score of 83, a Subjective Shoulder Value of 80, and a pain score of 0.

Patients with minimum 10 year followup had forward elevation averaging 160 degrees and internal rotation averaged reaching to T12.

Kaplan-Meier analysis found an implant survival of 89.0% for those patients with 10 year followup.



14 patients (10.4%) underwent a revision after a median of 2.8 years (before the 10 year clinical outcome inclusion mark). Indications for these revisions were instability in 2, overstuffed humerus in 2, cuff failure in 3, infection in 1, humeral loosening in 2, and glenoid loosening in 4. The only risk factor reported for revision was age below 65 yrs.

Complications not requiring revision included arthrofibrosis (2), infection, supraspinatus tear, periprosthetic fracture, scapular fracture, and ulnar nerve palsy. The overall complication rate was 16.4%. 

So, the question to ask is :what might have been done differently to avoid these complications?"

(1) Two revisions were performed within the first 6 months after surgery for "overstuffing". As we've discussed in prior posts, overstuffing is avoided by making a proper head cut, avoiding varus or incomplete insertion of the stem, and - most importantly - adjusting the head thickness so that, with the trial components in place, the shoulder has at least 150 degrees of flexion, internal rotation of 60 degrees with the arm in 90 degrees of abduction, 50% posterior translation, and external rotation of 40 degrees with the subcapularis approximated to its insertion site.

2. Two early revisions were required for instability. It is not clear whether in these cases the instability was anterior or posterior. Excessive posterior translation can be identified at surgery and managed by an anteriorly eccentric humeral head (as detailed in prior posts). Anterior instability is often a result of failure of the subscapularis reattachment. This risk can be minimized by a careful subscapularis peel, preserving the capsule on the tendon's deep surface, a complete 360 degree release of the muscle/tendon, avoiding overstuffing, a robust repair to the lesser tuberosity with 6 sutures with an addition suture or two in the lateral rotator interval to reinforce the repair, and avoiding unintended stretching in excessive external rotation.

3. Four revisions were for glenoid compoinent loosening. The risk of this complication can be minimized by using either an all polyethylene glenoid component with ingrowth pegs or a hybrid cage design rather than the all-cemented peg design used in this study and by assuring excellent seating of the component in well-prepared glenoid bone.

It would be helpful to have clarification on a few issues:

(1) What was the rationale for chosing one of the four different humeral components?

(2) What were the technique and implant factors associated with humeral component loosening and periprosthetic fracture?

One other interesting challenge with long term studies such as this one is what's called "immortal time bias". It occurs when there is a period of time in the followup during which the clinical outcome cannot be known because of uncontrollable factors, such as the death of the patient or revision.  In this paper there was a 12 year inclusion period (2002-2014) with a required minimum 10 year followup. Patients who died early in the followup period or who had early revision were excluded from the clinical and functional analysis; the patients that died or had early revision would seem more likely to have increased risk of adverse outcomes, but they were removed from the study.  In this case 48 patients died and 14 patients had revision before the 10-year followup creating a study cohort of 42% of the initial population that is enriched with cases that are more likely to be successful. This can artifically inflate survival estimates and treatment effects, biasing the results toward favorable outcomes.

The authors appropriately acknowledged this limitation, noting that "due to the high number of deceased patients, a selection bias is inherent" and that "the revision rate may be underestimated due to the possibility that patients who were lost to follow-up may have undergone revision elsewhere." 

Clinical research, especially the pursuit of long-term followup is difficult, yet only through long term followup can we answer the patient's question: "how long is this arthroplasty likely to hold up?"

How long?


Long-billed Dowitcher
Malheur National Wildlive Refuge
Spring 2020



Here are some videos that are of shoulder interest
Shoulder arthritis - what you need to know (see this link).
How to x-ray the shoulder (see this link).
The ream and run procedure (see this link)
The total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link)
The cuff tear arthropathy arthroplasty (see this link).
The reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link).
The smooth and move procedure for irreparable rotator cuff tears (see this link)
Shoulder rehabilitation exercises (see this link). 

Sunday, January 18, 2026

How a surgeon can learn from their own adverse outcomes - an example of intrapractice analysis in reverse shoulder arthroplasty.

From the start of their career, each surgeon is launched on a personal learning curve for each procedure that they perform, progressively refining their approach. The surgeon is the method and this method evolves with experience. The great majority of our surgeries (thankfully) turn out well, thus the opportunity for learning lies in exploring the surgeon's adverse outcomes. One way to accomplish this is to compare a case of, for example, anatomic glenoid component failure to a matched set of aTSAs that did not have this type of failure, searching for surgeon-controlled variables that differed.

Here is an example of this type of intrapractice analysis. Four cases of acromial stress fractures after reverse shoulder arthroplasty (RSA) were each matched to four cases of RSA from the same surgeon's practice by age, sex, diagnosis, implant type, and year in which the surgery was performed. 

Two of the cases were initially non-displaced Levy IIB fractures that went on to displace in spite of immobilization (FX1 and FX2). Two of the cases were Levy I fractures that healed with immobilization (FX3 and FX4).

For each case and for their respective controls, we documented 14 measures of component position that are easily determined on plain anteroposterior radiographs. 

Radius of the glenosphere


Lateralization of the glenosphere center of rotation from the native glenoid bone.


Total thickness of the glenosphere (including baseplate and any augments) measured as the distance from the native glenoid bone to the lateral extent of the glenospherre.


Baseplate inferiorization measured as the distance between the center of the glenoid bone surface to the center of the baseplate. 



Baseplate tilt measured as the angle between the supraspinatus fossa line (white) and the baseplate. Note that values greater than 90 degrees indicate superior tilt in relation to the supraspinatus fossa line.


Humeral distalization measured as the distance between the acromial tip and the superior-lateral tip of the tuberosity. The HD was measured before and after the RSA. The difference (Delta HD) was calculated.



Measured as the distance between the glenoid bone surface and the superior-lateral tip of the tuberosity.


Measured as the distance between the lateral aspect of the glenosphere and the superior-lateral tip of the tuberosity


Measured as the distance between the glenosphere center of rotation and the superior-lateral tip of the tuberosity.

Measured as the distance between the glenosphere center of rotation and the tip of the acromion.
The AC - CT difference and the AC/CT ratios were also determined.

Here is a series of plots of the 14 measurements for the two cases of displaced Levy IIB fractures (FX1 and FX2). In each of the plots, the red dot indicates the fracture case and the green dots indicate the four controls matched for age, sex, diagnosis, implant type, and year in which the surgery was performed. 







Of particular interest in these two cases is the observation that the difference between the COR to acromion distance (AC) and the COR to tuberosity distance (CT) tended to be lower in the fracture cases than for the controls. 


This relationship is not seen for the two Levy I fracture cases that healed witrh immobilization.





Because change in humeral distalization has been implicated as a risk factor for acromial fractures, Delta HD and AC-CT differences were compared among the two displaced Levy IIB fractures (FX1 and FX2), the two healed Levy I fractures (FX3 and FX 4), and their respective controls.


While these data only reflect four fracture cases and their respective controls in this surgeon's practice, they suggest that the AC to CT difference is a more important surgeon-controlled risk factor for displaced Levy IIB fractures than humeral distalization. Thus in patients with patient risk factors for acromial fractures, the surgeon may wish to strive for AC>CT (a greater distance from the center of rotation to the acromion than the distance from the center of rotation to the tuberosity). 

More important than the results for these four cases is this methodolgy by which a surgeon can compare cases for any type of adverse outcome (e.g. glenoid component loosening, instability) to matched intrapractice controls with the goal of identifying potentially important surgeon-modifiable risk factors for future cases. 

Always trying to get better


Sooty Grouse

Mt, Rainier
July 2025



Here are some videos that are of shoulder interest
Shoulder arthritis - what you need to know (see this link).
How to x-ray the shoulder (see this link).
The ream and run procedure (see this link)
The total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link)
The cuff tear arthropathy arthroplasty (see this link).
The reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link).
The smooth and move procedure for irreparable rotator cuff tears (see this link)
Shoulder rehabilitation exercises (see this link). 


Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Robotics and shoulder arthroplasty - a podcast discussion





Here are some videos that are of shoulder interest
Shoulder arthritis - what you need to know (see this link).
How to x-ray the shoulder (see this link).
The ream and run procedure (see this link)
The total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link)
The cuff tear arthropathy arthroplasty (see this link).
The reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link).
The smooth and move procedure for irreparable rotator cuff tears (see this link)
Shoulder rehabilitation exercises (see this link).

Saturday, January 10, 2026

How I perform a kinematic anatomic shoulder arthroplasty : what is the appropriate amount of stuffing?

Overstuffing in anatomic shoulder athroplasty is simply defined as putting too much volume in the limited space of the glenohumeral joint. The capacity of the joint is limited by its soft tissue envelope. While a tight capsule can be surgically released, the excursion of the rotator cuff and subscapularis remain limiting.  Sort of like what Lewis Carroll described in his 1865 children's novel, Alice in Wonderland. After Alice drinks from the bottle labeled "DRINK ME" she expands to where she cannot move.



The authors of a recent article, Humeral Head Reconstruction in Anatomic Shoulder Arthroplasty: How to Assess It, How to Avoid Overstuffing, and Whether It Matters provide an excellent review of factors that can influence overstuffing.

When we perform an anatomic arthroplasty, we add volume: the humeral and the glenoid components.  When we replace a flattened humeral head with a round one, we add volume. When we add a glenoid component to a joint that had no preoperative articular cartilage, we add volume.

Other factors influence the change in volume in shoulder arthroplasty: osteophyte resection, location of the humeral head cut and extent of glenoid reaming. 

Since the goal of shoulder arthroplasty is restoration of mobility and stability, the optimal amount of stuffing for a particular shoulder cannot be determined by preoperative planning but only by intraoperative examination with the trial components in place. For example a shoulder with severe preoperative stiffness may need to be understuffed (i.e. putting in less volume than that suggested by preoperative imaging). Recall that our goal is not "restoring pre-morbid anatomy", but restoring optimal shoulder kinematics for the patient.

Here are some steps that have proven useful in optimizing anatomic shoulder arthroplasty outcomes for the patient while being mindful of stuffing.

(1) Preoperatively, have an in-depth discussion with patient regarding the procedure, emphasizing the importance of adhering to the postoperative rehabilitation. program, precautions, and contacting the surgical team with questions or concerns during the recovery period,

(2) Assess preoperative glenohumeral motion and write it on the white board in the OR.


(3) Review preoperative Grashey and axillary "truth" views to determine the degree of joint space loss, humeral flattening, and humeral centering. Display these images in the OR.



(4) Display the tentative plan on the Grashey view, recognizing that this plan does not consider the thickness of the glenoid component or the preoperative glenohumeral tightness.


(5) Perform a 360 release of the subscapularis to achieve maximal excursion.



(6) Resect osteophytes to reveal the inferior capsular reflection and identify the "hinge point"( the superior-lateral extent of the humeral articular surface) and place baby Hohmann retractor there to assure a complete head resection.



(7) Make humeral head cut at 45 degrees with the long axis of the shaft and in 30 degrees of retroversion, being careful to avoid the cuff insertion posteriorly.



(8) Conservatively ream the glenoid to a single concavity. 



(9) Insert glenoid component making sure it is perfectly seated on the prepared bone without cement between its backside and the glenoid bone.


(10) Insert trial humeral component, making sure that its superior margin is just below the berm.



(11) Verify the desired range of flexion, internal rotation with the arm in 90 degrees of abduction, and external rotation with the subscapularis approximated to its repair site. 


(12) If the range of motion is limited, especially if tight preoperatively, downsize the humeral component thickness.

(13) Examine stability: optimally shoot for 50% translation on posterior loading. If excessive posterior translation, consider anteriorly eccentric humeral head to avoid stiffness from overstuffing by upsizing humeral head thickness.

(14) Securely repair subscapularis and re-examine motion.


(15) Verify range of flexion with a "parting shot" photograph to be included in the operative note along with documentation of final range of motion measurements.


(16) Tailor post operative rehabilitation program, considering early assisted range of motion for shoulders at risk for stiffness. Document plan in operative note.


(17) Share a copy of the operative note with the patient.

(18) Stay in close communication with patient after surgery, inviting them to email photos of their progress in range of motion


until their rehabilitation is complete.



(19) If the outcome is not what was expected, ask the counterfactual : "what could I have done differently for this patient?

(20) Note that this is a Bayesian approach (see How to make good decisions in shoulder (and other) surgery : Bayesian Thinking) in which at each step the "prior" (starting with the preoperative images and the physical exam) is progressively informed by new information to generate a new "posterior" resulting in a kinematic arthroplasty (rather than an attempt at restoring "premorbid anatomy". Furthermore, the outcomes from each case refine the surgeon's priors for future similar patients, creating a continuous learning cycle that improves a surgeon's judgment over time - something that algorithmic or robotic approaches cannot replicate.




Be self-critical

Barred owl
Seattle Arboretum
2024


Here are some videos that are of shoulder interest
Shoulder arthritis - what you need to know (see this link).
How to x-ray the shoulder (see this link).
The ream and run procedure (see this link)
The total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link)
The cuff tear arthropathy arthroplasty (see this link).
The reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link).
The smooth and move procedure for irreparable rotator cuff tears (see this link)
Shoulder rehabilitation exercises (see this link).

Thursday, January 8, 2026

What should be the role of robotics in shoulder arthroplasty?


The author of a recent JBJS article, The Hidden Costs of Robotics in Hip and Knee Arthroplasty, pointed out that "The assumption that new technology represents progress is dangerous because it pushes us to adopt new technology without asking questions," 

So let's consider the questions we should pose about robotics and shoulder arthroplasty. 

We need to ask the right questions before we look for answers.

Keeping in mind that the great majority of anatomic and reverse total shoulder arthroplasties provide good outcomes for patients - whether they are performed in a community hospital or in a high volume center - what problems experienced by patients having shoulder arthroplasty are we trying to solve with robotics?


We know that robots have solved major problems in manufacturing, enabling standardized production of complex products like the Rolls Royce (here's a shot from their factory).



But the Rolls Royce factory bears no resemblance to the operating room.

In the Rolls Royce factory, the plan has been clearly laid out by the designing engineers; in shoulder surgery the plan is not clear - the desired position of the implants is variable patient to patient and planning cannot anticipate the soft tissue balancing needed to assure mobility and stability.

In the Rolls Royce factory, each chassis is identical and the landmarks are clear; in shoulder surgery each patient is different and the landmarks are much less clear.

In the Rolls Royce factory, the robot is firmly fixed to the chassis; in shoulder surgery the robot is - at best - loosely fixed to the patient.

In the Rolls Royce factory, the materials are of high and consistent quality; in shoulder surgery the patient's bone quality and rotator cuff integrity are variable. 

In the Rolls Royce factory, there is no need for a human to be concerned about safety; in shoulder surgery, the surgeon's (but not the robot's) concern is for patient safety: avoiding infection, nerve and vessel injury, instability, fracture, limited motion, and component loosening.

So here are some important questions that we need to answer

(1) Do we know preoperatively what arthroplasty geometry we should be planning for in a given case (e.g. where do we want the center of rotation to be? does the desired amount of postoperative humeral distalization depend on the preoperative distalization? how much global lateralization is desirable and does this depend on cuff status, preoperative stiffness, or preoperative instability?)

(2) Given that the justification for robotics is to optimize the transfer of a preoperative geometric plan to the execution of the arthroplasty, what percent of poor arthroplasty outcomes can be attributed to the failed transfer of the preoperative plan to the patient? This fundamental information is currently unavailable, yet robotics is being promoted without evidence of the problem's magnitude.

(3) How sensitive are shoulder arthroplasty outcomes to minor "malpositions" in the range of 5-10 degrees or millimeters? A field goal kicker scores with a kick passing anywhere between two uprights 18.5 feet apart;  how tight is the tolerance for arthroplasty component positioning?

(4)  What improvement in patient reported outcomes would justify the cost of robotics for high-volume surgeons who already have a great success rate without using robotics? 

(5) Most shoulder arthroplasties are performed by "low volume" surgeons who perform less than 10 a year. How likely is it that these surgeons would have access to and training in the effective, efficient and safe use of robotics? Or would hands-on skills courses teaching them conventional techniques be of more use in optimizing their patient outcomes?

(6) Does use of robotics enhance a surgeon's ability to manage the wide variety of arthritic shoulder pathologies they encounter, or does it lead technological dependency?


In conclusion, we should ask "to what degree will the application of robotics to execute a preoperative plan address the primary causes of shoulder arthroplasty failure - infection, instability, acromial fracture, limited motion, and component loosening?"


A prickly topic

 

Cactus Wren

Tucson, AZ

2020


Here are some videos that are of shoulder interest
Shoulder arthritis - what you need to know (see this link).
How to x-ray the shoulder (see this link).
The ream and run procedure (see this link)
The total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link)
The cuff tear arthropathy arthroplasty (see this link).
The reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link).
The smooth and move procedure for irreparable rotator cuff tears (see this link)
Shoulder rehabilitation exercises (see this link).






Sunday, January 4, 2026

How to make good decisions in shoulder (and other) surgery : Bayesian Thinking

A recent article in the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Bayesian Thinking in Orthopaedics Principles, Practice, and Pitfalls, caught my eye. Basically, it's the idea that we we continually update the understanding we had previously (the "prior") with newly observed information to create a revised undertanding (the "posterior"). 

Bayesian reasoning naturally aligns with how experienced surgeons think. When evaluating a patient, we don't start with a blank slate - we begin with prior knowledge from previous cases, published literature, and clinical experience. As we gather history, examine the patient, and review imaging, we continuously update our diagnostic and therapeutic probabilities. Formalizing this intuitive process through Bayesian statistical methods can enhance both clinical decision-making and research interpretation.

Bear with me as we go through this a bit formally.

In Bayes' theorem,  

A = the hypothesis or condition you're interested in (e.g. the patient has a cuff tear)

and  B = the evidence or observation you have (e.g. patient has a positive drop arm test)

P(A|B) = posterior probability of A given that B is true (e.g. probability patient has a tear given positive drop arm test (positive predictive value))

P(B|A) = probability of B given that A is true (e.g. probability of positive drop arm test given patient has a tear (sensitivity of test))

P(A) = prior probability of A (before considering B) (e.g. baseline prevalence of tears in your patient population)

P(B) = probability of B occurring (e.g. overall probability of a positive drop arm test)(P(B) = true positives + false positives. When specificity is poor, false positives inflate P(B), diluting your posterior probability even with good sensitivity.

P(A|B) = [P(B|A) × P(A)] / P(B)

Example

  • Prior: 65-year-old with night pain, weakness → P(tear) = 0.60
  • Test: Positive drop arm test → Posterior P(tear) = 0.85
  • This 0.85 becomes the new prior if you order an MRI
  • Next test: MRI shows full-thickness tear → New posterior ≈ 0.98
  • So Bayes' theorem tells you: the probability your patient actually has a tear given their positive test depends not just on the test's sensitivity (P(B|A), but also on how common tears are in your population and how often the test is positive overall (P(B).

    This is why the same test result means different things in different populations - the prior probability P(A) matters enormously:

    • High P(A) → high posterior probability
    • Low P(A) → low posterior probability
    • Same test, different priors, different conclusions
    P(B) = probability of B occurring (e.g. overall probability of a positive drop arm test). Importantly, P(B) represents true positives + false positives—when specificity is poor, false positives inflate P(B), diluting the posterior probability even with good sensitivity.

    Clinical example:

    Scenario 1: High prior

    • 70-year-old, chronic pain, night pain, weakness, atrophy
    • P(A) = 0.80 (high pretest probability)
    • Positive drop arm → Posterior ≈ 0.95
    • The test confirms what you already suspected

    Scenario 2: Low prior

    • 25-year-old, first-time anterior dislocation, full range of motion
    • P(A) = 0.05 (low pretest probability)
    • Positive drop arm → Posterior ≈ 0.20
    • The test is probably a false positive

    How does this relate to clinical decision making? 

    Diagnostic Reasoning

    Consider a 65-year-old patient presenting with shoulder pain and weakness. Before examining them, we already have prior probabilities based on age and presentation:

    • Rotator cuff tear: ~40% probability (high prevalence in this age group)

    • Glenohumeral arthritis: ~15% probability

    • Cervical radiculopathy: ~10% probability

    • Frozen shoulder: ~5% probability

    A positive drop arm test increases the probability of a full-thickness rotator cuff tear to approximately 70%. An MRI showing a 3cm retracted supraspinatus tear with fatty infiltration further updates our posterior probability to >95%. This sequential updating of probabilities reflects Bayesian inference.

    Treatment Selection

    Bayesian thinking becomes particularly valuable when choosing between treatment options. For a patient with a chronic, massive rotator cuff tear, we might frame the decision as:

    Prior belief: Based on literature and experience, there's approximately 60% probability that reverse shoulder arthroplasty will provide superior pain relief and function compared to debridement alone.

    Patient-specific factors update this probability:

    • Age >70 years increases probability to 75%

    • Pseudoparalysis increases probability to 85%

    • Minimal arthritis maintains probability around 85%

    • Patient engaged in heavy labor decreases expected satisfaction to 70%

    This probabilistic framework facilitates shared decision-making by explicitly quantifying uncertainty and incorporating patient-specific factors.

    Research Applications

    Rotator Cuff Repair: Structural Healing vs. Functional Outcomes

    Our 25-year systematic review showed persistent weak correlation between structural healing and functional outcomes (r ≈ 0.3-0.4) despite improved retear rates with modern techniques. A Bayesian analysis could answer:

    Question: "Given 25 years of accumulated evidence, what is the probability that achieving structural healing produces a clinically meaningful improvement in functional outcomes?"

    Prior: Weakly informative, centered on moderate correlation (r = 0.5)

    Data: 25 years of studies showing consistent r ≈ 0.3-0.4

    Posterior probability:

    • >95% probability that some correlation exists (r > 0)

    • ~60% probability that correlation is weak to moderate (r = 0.2-0.5)

    • <5% probability that correlation is strong enough (r > 0.7) to justify prioritizing structural healing as primary outcome

    This probabilistic statement is far more clinically useful than "p < 0.05 for correlation." It tells us that while structural healing probably matters somewhat, the evidence strongly suggests we should focus on functional outcomes and pain relief rather than obsessing over retear rates.

    Reverse Shoulder Arthroplasty: Technology Assessment

    Question: "What is the probability that robotic assistance in RSA improves clinically meaningful outcomes compared to standard instrumentation?"

    Prior: Start with neutral prior (50% probability of benefit), though skeptics might argue for pessimistic prior given lack of evidence

    Available evidence:

    • No randomized trials showing outcome differences

    • Observational studies showing improved component positioning (1-2° accuracy)

    • No clinical studies showing positioning accuracy translates to reduced failure rates

    • Known failure modes (infection, instability) minimally or unaffected by positioning precision

    Posterior probability:

    • ~15% probability of any clinically meaningful benefit

    • ~3% probability of benefit exceeding minimal clinically important difference

    • ~85% probability that cost ($3,000-5,000 per case) exceeds value

    This analysis forces robotics proponents to justify their optimistic priors with evidence, which seems to be lacking at present. If more negative or neutral studies accumulate, even strongly optimistic priors wash out (as Figure 2 in the article illustrates).





    Illustration of the diminishing influence of the prior on the posterior distribution as more data are accumulated. In this example, they began with a pessimistic prior (the control group may perform better). As more data were accumulated, we see a decreased influence of the prior belief on the posterior probability of the treatment effect.


    Acromial Fracture Prediction


    Prior probabilities based on known risk factors:

    • Baseline fracture risk: 2-3%

    • Osteoporosis increases risk by factor of 3-4

    • Deltoid tension (measured by geometric parameters) increases risk

    Bayesian prediction model could provide individualized fracture probability:

    • 70-year-old woman with T-score -2.5, high deltoid tension: 15-18% probability

    • 65-year-old man with normal bone density, moderate tension: 3% probability

    This probabilistic risk stratification could guide surgical approach selection and postoperative rehabilitation protocols.

    Perioperative Optimization

    Nutrition optimization protocols exemplify Bayesian updating in real-time:

    Initial assessment (prior): Patient with albumin 3.2 g/dL has ~40% probability of wound complications

    Intervention: Nutritional supplementation for 4 weeks

    Reassessment (posterior): Albumin now 3.8 g/dL, probability of wound complications updated to ~15%

    Decision: Proceed with surgery versus continue optimization

    This iterative assessment and updating based on accumulating evidence is Bayesian reasoning applied clinically.

      

    Bayesian probabilities enhance informed consent by providing intuitive risk communication:

    Traditional approach: "Rotator cuff repair has a retear rate of 20-40%"

    Bayesian approach: "Based on your specific situation - a 2cm tear with minimal retraction and good tissue quality - there's approximately 75% probability of structural healing at 2 years. However, even if the repair doesn't heal completely, there's still an 80% probability you'll have significant pain relief and functional improvement."

    This probabilistic framing acknowledges uncertainty while providing actionable information. It also naturally incorporates your finding that structural and functional outcomes are only weakly correlated.

    Critical Evaluation of Literature

    When reading research using Bayesian methods, we can apply the two key questions from the paper:

    1. Was the prior appropriate?

    Acceptable priors:

    • Neutral (non-informative) prior centered on null hypothesis - appropriate when little prior evidence exists

    • Prior based on high-quality systematic reviews or meta-analyses

    • Prior explicitly justified and sensitivity analysis showing results robust to prior selection

    Problematic priors:

    • Optimistic prior favoring new technology without evidence justification

    • Prior based on weak observational data when better evidence exists

    • Prior selected to achieve desired conclusion (evident when sensitivity analysis not provided)

    2. Was sample size adequate?

    Just as underpowered frequentist studies (looking at p values from standard statistical tests such as t-test, Chi Square, Mann-Whitney) produce inconclusive results, Bayesian studies with insufficient data yield wide posterior distributions with high uncertainty. Look for:

    • Narrow posterior credible intervals

    • High probability (>90%) for clinically meaningful effects

    • Sensitivity analyses showing stable conclusions

    Practical Example: Stemless vs. Stemmed RSA

    Research question: Does stemless design provide equivalent fixation to stemmed implants in osteoporotic bone?

    Bayesian framework:

    Prior belief: Neutral prior (50% probability of equivalence), though biomechanical principles might suggest pessimistic prior since osteoporotic bone provides less surface area for fixation

    Evidence accumulation:

    • Early case series: Small samples, mixed results, wide uncertainty

    • Biomechanical studies: Reduced contact area in poor bone, updates probability of equivalence down to ~40%

    • Medium-term clinical studies: Similar reoperation rates in general population, probability returns toward 50%

    • Subset analysis in osteoporotic bone: Higher early loosening rates, probability of equivalence drops to ~25%

    Posterior probability:

    • ~25% probability that stemless provides equivalent fixation in osteoporotic bone

    • ~60% probability that stemless shows higher failure rates

    • ~15% probability of equivalence or superiority

    Clinical interpretation: In patients with good bone quality, stemless may be equivalent. In osteoporotic bone, evidence suggests higher risk with stemless designs. This nuanced conclusion better serves clinical decision-making than binary "significant/not significant. This demonstrates how evidence accumulates to overcome initial priors (see figure)—even if you started neutral or optimistic about stemless, the osteoporotic bone data updates you toward ~25% probability of equivalence.

    Avoiding Common Pitfalls

    Pitfall 1: Assuming Bayesian methods rescue poor study design

    As the paper emphasizes, Bayesian analysis doesn't overcome fundamental design flaws.  Insistence on rigorous methodology applies equally to Bayesian and frequentist approaches. Poor measurement, inadequate follow-up, and confounding bias compromise Bayesian results just as they do traditional statistics.

    Pitfall 2: Using priors to reach predetermined conclusions

    Critics sometimes accuse Bayesian methods of allowing researchers to "choose their answer" by selecting favorable priors. This concern is addressed by:

    • Using neutral priors when limited evidence exists

    • Explicitly justifying informative priors with high-quality evidence

    • Conducting sensitivity analyses showing conclusions robust across reasonable prior specifications

    • Recognizing that with adequate data, even strongly biased priors wash out (Figure above)

    Pitfall 3: Confusing statistical probability with clinical certainty

    A 95% posterior probability that Treatment A provides some benefit doesn't mean:

    • Treatment A definitely works

    • The magnitude of benefit is clinically meaningful

    • Treatment A is appropriate for all patients

    Always consider the full posterior distribution, clinical context, and patient preferences.

    Integration with Evidence-Based Medicine

    Bayesian methods complement rather than replace traditional evidence hierarchy:

    • Systematic reviews inform priors

    • Well-designed RCTs provide likelihood data

    • Patient values and circumstances personalize posterior probabilities

    • Clinical expertise integrates probabilistic evidence into individualized recommendations


    Conclusion

    Bayesian thinking formalizes how experienced clinicians already reason - starting with prior knowledge and updating beliefs as evidence accumulates. In shoulder surgery research, Bayesian methods offer particular advantages:

    • Direct probability statements about treatment benefits

    • Nuanced interpretation of effect magnitudes

    • Natural framework for incorporating prior evidence

    • Intuitive communication for shared decision-making

    • Explicit quantification of uncertainty

    However, Bayesian methods require the same rigorous study design, adequate sample sizes, and appropriate outcome measures that characterize all good research. They are a powerful tool for analysis and interpretation, but not a substitute for methodological excellence.

    For work challenging expensive technologies and promoting evidence-based practice, Bayesian frameworks provide compelling arguments. When proponents of robotics or patient-specific instrumentation claim benefits, ask: "What's your prior probability and how do you justify it? What's the posterior probability given accumulated evidence? What's the probability that benefits exceed costs?" These questions force explicit evidence-based reasoning rather than allowing claims based on theoretical advantages or marketing assertions.

    The future of orthopedic research will likely include more Bayesian analyses. Understanding these methods - their strengths, appropriate applications, and limitations - will enhance our ability to critically evaluate literature and contribute to evidence-based advancement of shoulder surgery.


    It's Elegant


    Elegant Trogon
    Tucson
    Spring 2020



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    Here are some videos that are of shoulder interest
    Shoulder arthritis - what you need to know (see this link).
    How to x-ray the shoulder (see this link).
    The ream and run procedure (see this link)
    The total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link)
    The cuff tear arthropathy arthroplasty (see this link).
    The reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link).
    The smooth and move procedure for irreparable rotator cuff tears (see this link)
    Shoulder rehabilitation exercises (see this link).