Sunday, February 15, 2026

Does subscapularis sparing = subscapularis sparing?


Clinically important subscapularis failure is reported in approximately 5% of patients following anatomic total shoulder arthroplasty. For example, Functional and radiographic results of anatomic total shoulder arthroplasty in the setting of subscapularis dysfunction: 5-year outcomes analysis found that patients who develop subscapularis dysfunction after TSA have worse patient reported outcome, range of motion, functional tasks of internal rotation, and radiographic outcomes, as well as increased rates of revision. In spite of subscapularis dysfunction, these patients maintained clinically significant improvement for pain and function at a mean 5-year follow-up.

Some surgeons have advocated a "subscapularis-sparing" approach to shoulder arthroplasty, with the goal of improving patient outcomes. The theoretical advantages of the subscapularis-sparing approach include earlier rehabilitation, reduced risk of subscapularis failure, and preservation of anterior shoulder stability.  See for example, The subscapularis-sparing windowed anterior technique for total shoulder arthroplasty which reviewed 47 cases performed by an individual experienced surgeon. 


However a recent article, Safety and Efficacy of Subscapularis-Sparing Shoulder Arthroplasty Approaches: A Systematic Literature Review considered 15 studies (1573 patients) reporting subscapularis-sparing shoulder arthroplasty. Eight studies directly compared subscapularis-sparing and standard techniques. The authors concluded "subscapularis-sparing" shoulder arthroplasty is a safe and effective technique with comparable patient outcomes, range of motion, pain and revision to nonsparing techniques." - i.e. they did not find evidence of greater clinical value with the "subscapularis-sparing" approach.


Two articles directly compared the two techniques (both by the same authors):


Total shoulder arthroplasty using a subscapularis-sparing approach: A radiographic analysis concluded "Although anatomic restoration of the shoulder can be accomplished using subscapularis-sparing TSA, retained osteophytes and significant mismatch of the HHD raise concerns regarding long-term outcomes."


Subscapularis-Sparing Total Shoulder Arthroplasty: A Prospective, Double-Blinded, Randomized Clinical Trial reported "At short-term follow-up, the outcome of TSA using the SSC-sparing surgical approach was similar to the outcome of TSA using the standard approach."


Concerns


(1) Like all new techniques, subscapularis-sparing has a learning curve to be negotiated by each surgeon using it. Even in experienced hands, in certain cases the technique may need to be abandoned in favor of a subscapularis takedown. See The subscapularis-sparing windowed anterior technique for total shoulder arthroplasty


(2) Risk of subscapularis distruption. Ultrasound assessment after a subscapularis-sparing approach to total shoulder arthroplasty found that rate of subscapularis disruption using a subscapularis-sparing approach for aTSA by was 14% (32 (86%) of 37 were intact)- thus, the risk of tendon injury is not eliminated with the subscapularis-sparing approach. As is the case for the failures with the standard approach, those with disrupted tendons had similar patient-reported outcomes but demonstrated decreased strength in forward flexion, abduction, and external rotation. 


(3) Limited exposure (See The subscapularis-sparing windowed anterior technique for total shoulder arthroplasty.)

    a. Restricted visualization may result in suboptimal component positioning, with 31.8% of patients showing center-of-rotation differences >3 mm. Additionally, humeral head diameter mismatch >4 mm occurs more commonly in the subscapularis-sparing group compared to traditional approaches.


    b. Incomplete osteophyte removal occurs more frequently with the subscapularis-sparing technique, achieved in only 75% of cases compared to more complete removal with traditional approaches. 


(4) Complications
    Complication profiles were similar between subscapularis-sparing and standard approaches in the randomized trial, with 3 patients in the sparing group and 2 in the standard group requiring revision surgery. See: Subscapularis-Sparing Total Shoulder Arthroplasty: A Prospective, Double-Blinded, Randomized Clinical Trial 


Comment:

The subscapularis-sparing approach is being explored to minimize clinically significant subscapularis dysfunction after shoulder arthroplasty. 

We have not adopted the subscapularis-sparing approach at this point; instead we prioritize surgical exposure to optimize glenoid component seating and complete osteophyte resection. We have not conducted a head to head comparison of our method to the subscapularis-sparing technique.

Our technique for anatomic arthroplasty is based on several key steps:
(1) Assess preoperative stiffness. Shoulders with limited external rotation when the arm is adducted are at higher risk of repair failure.

(2) Assess preoperative strength. Shoulders with weak internal rotation may have poor quality subscapularis tendons increasing risk of postoperative failure.

(3) Assess other risk factors for subscapularis failure: inflammatory arthropathy, malutrition, steroid use, prior surgery

(4) In shoulders at high risk for subscapularis failure, consider a reverse rather than an anatomic total shoulder (aTSA).

(5) In aTSA, release subscapularis tendon and subjacent capsule completely from lesser tuberosity, retaining capsule on the tendon's deep surface.



(6) Perform a 360 degree release of the subscapularis from the coracoid, glenoid, and inferior capsule to optimize excursion of tendon


(7) Perform glenoid arthroplasty

(8) If necessary, trial undersized humeral head component so that the lateral border of the subscapularis reaches the reattachment site at the lesser tuberosity with the arm in external rotation.


(9) Pass six FiberWire sutures through quality bone at the lesser tuberosity

(10) Insert humeral component sized per trialing (#5 above)


(11) Place additional FiberWire sutures in the rotator interval to reinforce the repair.


(12) Tie repair sutures

(13) Verify satisfactory motion before skin closure.


(14) Start assisted flexion in recovery room (note: our practice is to avoid plexus blocks for shoulder arthroplasty to allow sensory feedback during these exercises).


(15) Allow use of arm for activities with elbow at side. Gradually transition to active elevation starting at six weeks after surgery.


(16) Allow progressive increase in resistance over the first postoperaive year, making sure that 20 repetitions are easy and comfortable before adding additional weight.


Conclusion
Current evidence suggests that standard and subscapularis-sparing approaches produce similar outcomes. We prefer subscapularis peel and secure repair because in our hands it provides excellent exposure for osteophyte resection and glenoid component positioning and seating. At the same time we recognize that other surgeons may be equally comfortable with the subscapularis-sparing approach.


Making Choices


Cliff Swallows
Kalaloch Lodge, Washington
2021



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, February 12, 2026

Intraoperative navigation for shoulder arthroplasty - where are we going?

Computer-assisted navigation systems for shoulder replacement surgery are - like robotics (see What should be the role of robotics in shoulder arthroplasty?) - commercially advocated to aid surgeons in positioning components to match a preoperative plan based on a static preoperative CT scan.

Opinions vary among expert surgeons regarding which component positions (e.g. glenosphere position, lateralization, inclination; humeral distalization and lateralization) optimize patient reported comfort and function on one hand and minimize the risk of important complications (such as instability/dislocation and acromial/spine stress fractures) on the other. Furthermore the preoperative plan is formed in the absence of important intraoperative findings (such as soft tissue balance and bone characteristics) that are observed after the shoulder is surgically exposed and that often require the surgeon to modify the preoperative plan.

Let's consider a recent systematic review, The Role of Intraoperative Navigation in Reverse Total Shoulder Arthroplasty and its Impact on Clinical Outcomes: which assessed five studies with nearly 2,000 patients having reverses total shoulder carried out using ExactechGPS Navigation.

Three studies directly compared navigated versus conventional non-navigated reverse shoulder replacement. All three showed the same result: no clinically significant differences in functional outcomes.

Short-term clinical and radiologic outcomes of reverse total shoulder arthroplasty with navigation system in the Asian population: a retrospective comparative study found "the use of a navigation system in rTSA showed no significant difference in clinical outcomes and complications compared to conventional implantation."

Early clinical outcomes following navigation-assisted baseplate fixation in reverse total shoulder arthroplasty: a matched cohort study found: "navigated and non-navigated RSAs yielded similar rates of improvement in range of motion and functional outcome scores"

 Intraoperative navigation system use increases accuracy of glenoid component inclination but not functional outcomes in reverse total shoulder arthroplasty: a prospective comparative study. found "There were no statistically significant differences in ROM, PROMs, and satisfaction between patients receiving computer-navigated and standard RSA at a short-term follow-up. "

The review paper (The Role of Intraoperative Navigation in Reverse Total Shoulder Arthroplasty and its Impact on Clinical Outcomes) does not report comparative cost, surgical time, revision rates, or complication rates for patients receiving navigated and non-navigated reverse total shoulders. Furthermore, the article does not address the learning curve for this technology and whether this is a reasonable undertaking for the many surgeons who perform  relatively few reverse total shoulders per year.

Notably absent from all published studies is a comparative cost analysis. The proprietary nature of navigation system pricing—where capital equipment, disposables, software, and per-case fees create opaque total costs—prevents the field from conducting basic cost-effectiveness evaluation. 

There is yet another issue: that of complications related to the navigation system itself, such as problems with fixation of the device to the coracoid. Coracoid fracture represents an uncommonly reported but specific complication of navigation-assisted shoulder arthroplasty, with an overall reported incidence of approximately 0.05% in experienced hands but significantly higher rates (up to 30%) during the learning curve. 

High intraoperative accuracy and low complication rate of computer-assisted navigation of the glenoid in total shoulder arthroplasty analyzed 16,723 navigated shoulder arthroplasty cases reported 9 coracoid fractures.

GPS NAVIGATION SYSTEM ALLOWS THE SURGEON TO PREPARE THE IMPLANT SITE AS PLANNED ON PREOPERATIVE SOFTWARE IN REVERSE SHOULDER ARTHROPLASTY: 3 coracoid fractures in the first 10 cases

THE USE OF NAVIGATION IN REVERSE SHOULDER ARTHROPLASTY: PRELIMINARY REPORT OF 11 CASES: 1 fracture in the first case.

Safety and Efficacy of Intraoperative Computer-Navigated Versus Non-Navigated Shoulder Arthroplasty at a Tertiary Referral: 2 cases (5.5%) of coracoid fracture.

If you are curious, here's some detail about the ExactechGP Navigation system.  You might like by looking at this video

The Basic Technology -  

The Components:

1. Preoperative Planning

    * Patient gets a CT scan of their shoulder

    * Surgeon uploads CT to Equinoxe Planning App software

    * Surgeon creates a 3D virtual plan: glenoid component position, version, inclination, depth, screw trajectories

    * Within days, the plan is uploaded to GPS workstation

2. Intraoperative Hardware

GPS Workstation:

    * Compact mobile unit within sterile field

    * Has an infrared camera that tracks the LED markers

    * Screen displays real-time surgical guidance

Three Active Trackers (reusable, battery-powered with IR LEDs):

    * Probe Tracker: Hand-held pointer for registration

    * Glenoid Tracker: Attached to coracoid process (bone stabilizer)

    * Tool Tracker: Attached to surgical instruments (reamers, drill guides)

3. The Workflow

Step 1: Registration (Mapping CT to Patient)

    * Surgeon attaches Glenoid Tracker to coracoid process with a pin

    * Using the Probe Tracker, surgeon touches specific anatomic landmarks on the scapula

    * System matches these physical points to the CT scan

    * Creates a "coordinate system" linking the patient's real anatomy to the virtual plan

Step 2: Real-Time Guidance

    * Surgeon attaches Tool Tracker to reamer/drill/guide instruments

    * Camera tracks all three trackers simultaneously via their IR LEDs

    * Screen shows:

        o Current instrument position vs. planned position

        o Version and inclination in real-time

        o Reaming depth

        o Screw trajectories and lengths

Step 3: Verification

    * After component placement, system verifies final position

    * Compares achieved vs. planned placement


Conclusion:

The question each surgeon must ask is whether intraoperative navigation addresses problems experienced by patients in their own practice having reverse total shoulder arthroplasty.

The question the field of shoulder surgery must ask is which specific patient problems (instability? fracture? stiffness? pain?) occur due to positioning errors that: (a) surgeons using standard techniques cannot adequately control, and (b) navigation systems would prevent. 


Finding the way


Snow Geese 
Skagit, Washington
202

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). 


Monday, February 9, 2026

Rethinking rotator cuff tear management - how do we want to spend the money?


The management of patients with rotator cuff tears presents a significant clinical and economic challenge. With annual costs of rotator cuff surgery exceeding $3 billion in the United States alone, and increasing evidence that structural repair does not always correlate with functional outcomes, a critical reassessment of the cost-effectiveness of different management options seems warranted. 

Let's start with a case example

A 70 year old active skier, cyclist, climber and practicing orthopaedic surgeon presented with the progressive onset of pain in the right shoulder. Physical examination revealed weakness of resisted elevation, but a good range of active motion. Plain radiographs showed no evidence of arthritis. The MRI findings are shown below.  


Surgical repair was offered but declined in favor of a home exercise program. A decade later the shoulder has a full painless range of range of motion and strength sufficient for sports and surgical practice. 

An Overview

Rotator cuff disease is extremely common, affecting up to 25% of the population over age 40. Tear prevalence, size, likelihood of progression, and retear rates after surgical repair are all related to increasing age. Fewer than 5% of people with rotator cuff tears come to surgery, the great majority of rotator cuff tears are either asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic. 

However, Over a half million cuff surgeries are performed each year and this number is increasing




Non-operative treatment represents the most cost-effective strategy for many patients with symptomatic rotator cuff tears.

Jed Kuhn and the MOON (Multicenter Orthopaedic Outcomes Network) Shoulder Group that he leads published Effectiveness of physical therapy in treating atraumatic full-thickness rotator cuff tears: a multicenter prospective cohort study, a multicenter prospective cohort study of 452 patients with atraumatic full-thickness rotator cuff tears treated with a standardized physical therapy protocol. The study found that 75% of patients achieved successful outcomes with physical therapy alone at 2-year follow-up, with "failure" defined as patients electing to undergo surgery. 

The Predictors of Surgery for Symptomatic, Atraumatic Full-Thickness Rotator Cuff Tears Change Over Time: Ten-Year Outcomes of the MOON Shoulder Prospective Cohort, a follow-up study tracked the original cohort for 10 years and found that physical therapy remained successful in over 70% of patients, with only 27% ultimately requiring surgery. Importantly, patient-reported outcomes improved with physical therapy and did not decline over the 10-year period. This study won the 2024 Kappa Delta Ann Doner Vaughan Award and demonstrated the long-term durability of non-operative treatment.

EXERCISE THERAPY IN THE NON-OPERATIVE TREATMENT OF FULL-THICKNESS ROTATOR CUFF TEARS: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW Of the non-operatively treated cohorts 78% improved in pain, 81% improved in range of motion, 85% improved in strength, 84% improved in functional outcomes. Dissatisfied outcomes occurred in 15% of patients, who then transitioned to surgery.

The cost differential is substantial. Home exercises are inexpensive and often effective. While comprehensive physical therapy may cost $1,500-3,000 over several months, surgical repair typically ranges from $15,000-25,000, creating a 10-fold cost difference for initial treatment. Given that many patients achieve acceptable outcomes with therapy alone, this represents a significant opportunity for cost savings without compromising patient outcomes.

Patient selection for non-operative management should prioritize older individuals (typically >65 years), those with maintained active forward elevation without pseudoparalysis, reasonable functional demands, and chronic rather than acute tears. 


Symptoms of cuff tears do not correlate strongly with the magnitude of the defect.

Symptoms of pain do not correlate with rotator cuff tear severity: a cross-sectional study of 393 patients with a symptomatic atraumatic full-thickness rotator cuff tear, A cross-sectional study of 393 patients with symptomatic atraumatic full-thickness rotator cuff tears demonstrated that pain severity does not correlate with tear size or other anatomic features. This finding challenged the assumption that larger tears necessarily cause more symptoms and require more aggressive treatment.

Patient self-assessed shoulder comfort and function and active motion are not closely related to surgically documented rotator cuff tear integrity found that cuff integrity was not strongly associated with the shoulder's comfort or function. 


Repair attempts often lead to failure of anatomic healing of the tendon to bone; clinical outcomes are largely independent of repair integrity.

Arthroscopic repair of full-thickness tears of the supraspinatus: does the tendon really heal? Only 43% of patients over the age of sixty-five years had completely healed tendons.

Failure with continuity in rotator cuff repair "healing" found that all rotator cuff repairs retracted substantially away from their position of initial fixation during the first year after surgery (mean 16.1 ± 5.3 mm; range, 5.7-23.2 mm), yet only 30% of patients showed a defect on MRI. This study is important because it indicates that an "intact" tendon repair on MRI may not indicate healing of the tendon to the insertion site. This finding may be especially relevant to the assessment of repair integrity after the use of patches and grafts.

The outcome and repair integrity of completely arthroscopically repaired large and massive rotator cuff tears reported arthroscopic repair of large and massive rotator cuff tears led to a high percentage of recurrent defects. The minimum twelve-month evaluation showed excellent pain relief and improvement in the ability to perform activities of daily living despite the high rate of recurrent defects.

Rotator cuff repair: published evidence on factors associated with repair integrity and clinical outcome found that the mean re-tear rate was 26.6% at a mean of 23.7 months after surgery.  Patient-reported outcomes were generally improved whether or not the repair restored the integrity of the rotator cuff.  In spite of a dramatic increase in the number of publications per year and the advent of biologic augmentation there was little evidence that the clinical results of rotator cuff repair were improving with time. 

Structural Integrity After Rotator Cuff Repair Does Not Correlate with Patient Function and Pain The differences in validated functional outcome scores and pain were not clinically significant for intact and failed repairs.


Non-repair surgery - the underutilized "smooth and move" procedure / debridement (see this link)

Smoothing the humeroscapular motion interface without acromioplasty is a quick, safe procedure for painful cuff tears in shoulders with preserved active elevation. It allows the patient immediate return to use of the shoulder without postoperative "down time". It does not involve use of a more costly "subacromial balloon" or a "biological tuberoplasty". The cost-effectiveness advantages of debridement are substantial. Operative time is typically 30-45 minutes compared to 2-3 hours for complex repairs, resulting in lower facility and anesthesia costs. Recovery is faster, allowing quicker return to activities and reduced rehabilitation expenses. Complication rates are lower due to the less invasive nature of the procedure.

Treatment of irreparable cuff tears with smoothing of the humeroscapular motion interface without acromioplasty.  In 77 shoulders with previously unrepaired irreparable tears, simple shoulder test (SST) scores improved from an average of 4.6 to 8.5. Fifty-four patients (70%) improved by at least the minimally clinically important difference (MCID) of 2 SST points. For 74 shoulders with irreparable failed prior repairs, SST scores improved from 4.0 to 7.5. Fifty-four patients (73%) improved by the MCID. This conservative procedure offers an alternative to more complex procedures in the management of irreparable rotator cuff tears.

Significant improvement in patient self-assessed comfort and function at six weeks after the smooth and move procedure for shoulders with irreparable rotator cuff tears and retained active elevation In 40 patients with preoperative and 6-week postoperative measurements, the Simple Shoulder Test scores improved from an average of 3.4 ± 2.8 preoperatively to 5.7 ± 3.5 at 6 weeks (p < 0.001), an improvement that exceeded the published values for the minimal clinically important difference (MCID). The clinical outcomes were not worse for the 18 shoulders with irreparable tears of both the supraspinatus and infraspinatus. In addition to its previously documented long-term effectiveness for shoulders with irreparable rotator cuff tears and retained active elevation, this study demonstrates that the smooth and move procedure provides clinically significant improvement as early as 6 weeks after surgery.

Comparing outcomes between debridement and attempted repair of large/massive tears reveals only modest functional differences, yet the repair costs more and carries higher complication risks.

Massive rotator cuff tears: functional outcome after debridement or arthroscopic partial repair Both treatment groups had similar pain relief and satisfaction, reflected in equal values of disabilities of the arm, shoulder and hand (DASH) score. Ultrasonography revealed structural failure of the partial rotator cuff repair in 52% at final follow-up.

Partial rotator cuff repair versus debridement for irreparable rotator cuff tears: A systematic review 709 shoulders from 706 patients were reviewed, with 380 patients receiving a partial repair and 329 shoulders receiving debridement.  Pre- and post-operative mean VAS scores were the same for both treatments. Patient satisfaction with partial repair was reported as 75 %; for patients treated with debridement, post-operative satisfaction was 80.7 %.This systematic review study demonstrates that both partial repair and debridement alone can result in acceptable clinical outcomes with no significant differences noted for patients with irreparable rotator cuff tears in short to mid-term follow up.


Standard Rotator Cuff Repair

Standard surgical repair remains the gold standard of treatment for cuff tears when the quantity and quality of the tendon is adequate. The outcomes of cuff repair surgery are strongly influenced by the patient's nutrition. See: The "Secret Sauce" for Optimizing Rotator Cuff Outcomes: Biologics or nutrition?


Biologics, patches, PRP, and augmentation 

While these interventions are associated with reduced retear rates there is currently insufficient evidence that their significantly increased costs result in clinically meaningful improvement in clinical outcomes for patients. Structural healing on imaging does not reliably translate to better clinical outcomes for patients. This disconnect persists despite 25+ years of rotator cuff biological augmentation research.


Platelet-Rich Plasma (PRP)

Use of platelet-rich plasma for the improvement of pain and function in rotator cuff tears: a systematic review and meta-analysis with bias assessment Improvements in PRP-treated patients were noted for multiple functional outcomes, but none reached their respective minimal clinically important differences

Clinical and structural outcomes after arthroscopic repair of full-thickness rotator cuff tears with and without platelet-rich product supplementation: a meta-analysis and meta-regression. A meta-analysis of Level I and II studies found no statistically significant differences in overall outcome scores or retear rates between PRP-treated and control groups.

Evaluating the longitudinal efficacy of platelet-rich plasma in rotator cuff surgery: a systematic review and meta-analysis While PRP reduced pain (VAS) in the early postoperative period, the improvement was not clinically significant.

Platelet-rich plasma for arthroscopic repair of large to massive rotator cuff tears: a randomized, single-blind, parallel-group trial found that despite better structural healing in the PRP group, there was no clinically significant difference in outcomes between groups.

Cost: Approximate per-procedure expense of PRP:  preparation kits: $600 per case; 15 min additional OR time for preparation ($600), processing equipment ($3,000-15,000). The Cost-Effectiveness of Using Platelet-Rich Plasma During Rotator Cuff Repair: A Markov Model Analysis This cost-utility analysis shows that, currently, the use of PRP to augment rotator cuff repair is not cost-effective.


Scaffold and Patch Augmentation

The clinical adoption of these technologies raises questions about their actual effectiveness in improving patient outcomes, their cost-effectiveness in real-world practice, and their safety profile. 

A prospective, randomized evaluation of acellular human dermal matrix augmentation for arthroscopic rotator cuff repair found the change in ASES, Constant, and UCLA scores were not clinically signficantly better (did not exceed MCID) for the matrix augmentation group than for the controls.

A pilot randomised controlled trial assessing standard versus dermal patch-augmented rotator cuff repair found no adverse effects and suggest future trials need a minimum of 150 patient Among 40 patients randomized to augmented repair versus standard repair there was no difference between groups with respect to clinical outcomes.

Clinical and anatomical outcomes of arthroscopic repair of large rotator cuff tears with allograft patch augmentation: a prospective, single-blinded, randomized controlled trial with a long-term follow-up This prospective, single-blinded RCT compared arthroscopic repair of large rotator cuff tears with vs. without allograft dermal patch augmentation at mean 7.3-year follow-up. Clinical outcomes (Patch vs. Control at final follow-up): VAS pain: 1.3 vs. 1.5 (difference 0.2 - clinically insignificant) ASES: 87.9 vs. 86.1 (difference 1.8 points - well below MCID of 6.4Constant: 82.6 vs. 79.5 (difference 3.1 points - well below MCID of 10.4)UCLA: 32.0 vs. 31.0 (difference 1.0 point - below MCID) SST: 10.2 vs. 9.6 (difference 0.6 - below MCID of ~2 points). None of these differences were clinically significant.

Outcome of Large to Massive Rotator Cuff Tears Repaired With and Without Extracellular Matrix Augmentation: A Prospective Comparative Study Uniquely, this study showed a clinically significant difference in ASES score with matrix augmentation.

Cost: Resorbable Bioinductive Collagen Implant Is Cost Effective in the Treatment of Rotator Cuff Tears Average cost of treatment $32,213 without Regeneten, $54,459 with Regeneten (additional cost 69%). The authors did not assess patient reported outcomes or revision rates for patients without or with the patch. While using "healing" as the study endpoint, the authors point out that there is lack of agreement on what constitutes healing or re-tearing after a cuff repair based on magnetic resonance imaging, ultrasound, or arthrogram. Evidence was not presented that "healing" by imaging correlated with better clinical outcomes .

Economic Evaluation of a Bioinductive Implant for the Repair of Rotator Cuff Tears Compared with Standard Surgery in Italy. Average cost of treatment 4650 without Regeneten, 7828 with Regeneten (additional cost 68%). Study limitations the same as those for the report above.

Complications: 

Increased stiffness and reoperation rate in partial rotator cuff repairs treated with a bovine patch: a propensity-matched trial found that postoperative stiffness was observed in the first 12 weeks in 8 of 32 patients in the Regeneten patch group compared with 1 of 32 patients in the control group. Six patients in the patch group underwent reoperations compared with no patients in the control group. All 6 reoperations in the patch group were performed to address stiffness. The authors concluded that patients in the patch group had a significantly higher rate of postoperative stiffness. In the majority of patients in whom shoulder stiffness developed, reoperation was required. 


Subacromial-Subdeltoid Bursitis With Rice Bodies After Rotator Cuff Repair With a Collagen Scaffold Implant: A Case Reportreported a case of subacromial-subdeltoid bursitis with rice bodies after rotator cuff repair with a Smith + Nephew REGENETEN bovine-derived bioinductive collagen scaffold implant. After debridement, the patient recovered well and made a full return to work and recreational activities.

Revision arthroscopic surgery after rotator cuff repair with a collagen graft: histologic evaluation of biopsy specimens from two patientsPatients undergoing collagen scaffold augmentation should be warned of the possibility of reactive bursitis. Cases of reactive bursitis may need to be managed with surgical débridement to treat symptoms and structural failure and to rule out infection. 

Restore orthobiologic implant: not recommended for augmentation of rotator cuff repairs  Years after surgical repair of large rotator cuff defects supplemented with a xenograft, patients had persisting deficits and no recognizable benefit as compared with the results in a control group. In view of these findings, together with the unsatisfactorily high proportion of patients with a severe inflammatory reaction to the xenograft, the authors do not recommend use of the Restore Orthobiologic Implant.

Subacromial-Subdeltoid Bursitis With Rice Bodies After Rotator Cuff Repair With a Collagen Scaffold Implant: A Case Report This case demonstrates persistent pain, swelling and decreased range of motion for several months after rotator cuff repair with the use of a collagen implant

Severe subacromial-subdeltoid inflammation with rice bodies associated with implantation of a bio-inductive collagen scaffold afterrotator cuff repair  The potential for an acute, significant painful phase in a patient’s recovery should be part of the informed-consent process when using the Regeneten implant.

These findings suggest that reactive bursitis may be an under-recognized complication of biological patch augmentation, potentially contributing to the increased stiffness rates observed in larger series. What makes these complication rates concerning is their infrequency in control groups. In the propensity-matched study, zero patients in the standard repair group required reoperation, while 19% of patch-augmented patients did experience this novel category of complications associated with the augmentation material itself.


Conclusions:
(1) Age-relared rotator cuff failure is common and very often minimally symptomatic.
(2) Physical therapy can be cost-effective in improving comfort and function for the majority of patients with these tears.
(3) Non-repair surgery (smooth and move/debridement) can be cost-effective for patients with retained active elevation
(4) Surgical repair can be cost-effective when there is adequate quantity and quality of cuff tendon.
(5) PRP and "biologic" patches have not been shown to be cost-effective in improving patient reported outcomes. Sponsored 'cost-effectiveness' studies measuring surrogate endpoints (e.g. healing by imaging) rather than patient-centered outcomes may be misleading by not considering patient outcomes and complications.


Looking the problem in the eye.



Red-faced Warbler
Tucson
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).