(1) The commonly used and easy to measure "revision rate" is an inadequate endpoint for evaluating rTSA outcomes. The 8–20 percentage point gap that exists between the complication rate and the revision rate includes a substantial number of patients with failed but unrevised reverse shoulder arthroplasties. These patients are not considered in determining the failure rate when measured by the percentage having revision. Complication-free survival or patient-reported outcome measures should supplement or replace revision rate or "implant survival" as the primary outcome measure for rTSA.
(2) The most common complications of rTSA, acromial and scapular spine fractures, are unique and difficult to solve problems for patients having reverse arthroplasty. In contrast, the most common complications from aTSA - glenoid component loosening and rotator cuff tear - can be effectively managed by revision to a rTSA
Meta-analytic evidence reports that anatomic total shoulder (aTSA) has a higher rate of revision compared to reverse total shoulder (rTSA). This observation may have driven much of the shift toward rTSA for patients with cuff-intact arthritis. However, it may neglect the fact that surgeons and patients can decide against revision of a failed rTSA because of the low rate of success. Thus, the absence of a revision does not indicate a good outcome.
Complications and further surgery after reverse total shoulder arthroplasty : report of 854 primary cases reported an overall complication rate of 18–22%, yet a revision rate of only ~10%. That 8–12 percentage point gap likely represents patients who are living with a failing implant — either because revision was technically not feasible, or because expected outcomes were too poor to justify reoperation
Comparison of complication types and rates associated with anatomic and reverse total shoulder arthroplasty found that the top 3 complications for rTSA were acromial/scapular fracture/pain ( complication rate 2.5%, revision rate 0.0%), instability (complication rate 1.4%, revision rate 1.0%), pain (1.2%, revision rate 0.2%). Compare the relationship of complications to revisions for rTSA to that for aTSA in the two charts below constructed from the data in this article. Note that a high percentage of the rTSA complications were not associated with surgical revision. Absence of revision ≠ absence of complication,
The Gap Between Revision-Free and Complication-Free Survival
A Follow-up of a Previous Study The 93% ten-year revision-free survival rate for rTSA did not capture the 29% of patients who experienced complications.
Long term clinical and radiological outcomes of primary reverse total shoulder arthroplasty at a minimum follow-up of 15 years: Norwegian registry data showed 10-year complication-free rates of only 76–80%, despite revision-free survival of 91–95%. That 15–20 percentage point gap represents patients living with failed implants who are invisible in the revision statistics. Again, this gap exists because many rTSA complications—particularly acromial fractures, low-grade infection, and baseplate loosening with severe bone loss—either cannot be addressed surgically or carry such poor expected revision outcomes that conservative management is chosen.
Revision rates alone remain an inadequate measure of rTSA performance; complication-free survival is the more appropriate endpoint.
Outcomes of Revision rTSA
The Salvage Pathway Asymmetry: revision for aTSA Failure compared to revision for rTSA Failure
(2) The most common complications of rTSA, acromial and scapular spine fractures, are unique and difficult to solve problems for patients having reverse arthroplasty. In contrast, the most common complications from aTSA - glenoid component loosening and rotator cuff tear - can be effectively managed by revision to a rTSA
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