Rotator Cuff Revision Benefits Not Long-Lasting

Further study needed to identify ways to improve long-term outcomes.

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By: Michael Barbella

Managing Editor

The functional and clinical improvements for patients who undergo revision arthroscopic rotator cuff repair surgery do not last as long when compared with patients who have first-time surgery, according to recent sports medicine research.

“Further studies are needed to identify ways to improve long-term outcomes following revision arthroscopic rotator cuff surgery. However, our results do highlight the long-term success of primary rotator cuff surgery and may help patients understand the realistic expectation of the outcomes of revision arthroscopic rotator cuff surgeries,” Aminudin Mohamed Shamsudin, M.D., said in a news release.

Investigators from the Orthopaedic Research Institute in Sydney, Australia, conducted a retrospective review of 350 (300 primary, 50 revision) arthroscopic rotator cuff repairs with standardized patient-ranked outcomes, examiner-determined assessments and ultrasound-determined rotator cuff integrity evaluated preoperatively, at six months and two years postoperatively.

The re-tear rate for the primary rotator cuff repair cohort was 16 percent at six months and 21 percent at final follow-up. Patients in the revision cohort showed a 28 percent re-tear rate at six months, a rate that increased to 40 percent at final follow-up. At two years postoperatively, the primary cohort reported less pain at rest, during sleep and with overhead activity compared with the revision group. At final follow-up, patients who had a primary cuff repair had better forward flexion (+13 percent), abduction (+18 degrees), internal rotation (+2 vertebral levels), greater strength, lift-off strength and adduction strength when compared with revision group patients.

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