4.3 Article

Difficulty in decision making in the treatment of displaced proximal humerus fractures: the effect of uncertainty on surgical outcomes

Journal

JOURNAL OF SHOULDER AND ELBOW SURGERY
Volume 27, Issue 3, Pages 470-477

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jse.2017.09.033

Keywords

Displaced; proximal humerus fractures; uncertainty; evolution; ORIF; arthroplasty; decision making; reverse shoulder arthroplasty

Funding

  1. DJO Surgical

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Background: Decision making in the management of proximal humerus fractures can be difficult in situations in which the surgeon is uncertain of the ideal treatment. Methods: Two shoulder surgeons operatively treated 476 proximal humerus fractures from 1998-2014 with open reduction-internal fixation (ORIF), hemiarthroplasty, or reverse shoulder arthroplasty. Operative treatment was stratified by year to determine the evolution of technological influences on treatment over time. To evaluate the effect of uncertainty, 274 clinical vignettes were created for all patients with 1 year of follow-up or more and reviewed by 3 fellowship-trained shoulder surgeons to determine the type of treatment for each case. To evaluate the effect of certainty, range of motion for each patient with unanimous agreement on treatment was analyzed. Results: ORIF treatment increased from 40% to 62% after release of the proximal humerus locking plate. Introduction of the fracture stem in 2011 increased reverse shoulder arthroplasty for fractures from 8.8% to 44.3%. Unanimous agreement on either operative or nonoperative treatment occurred 70.5% of the time. Only 63.5% of patients received the actual treatment selected (P = .001). Patients for whom unanimous agreement matched actual treatment in the ORIF treatment group showed improvement of forward elevation (144 degrees vs 123 degrees, P = .005) and abduction (129 degrees vs 103 degrees, P = .002). Conclusion: Successful management of displaced proximal humerus fractures requires both technical and decision-making abilities. The difficulty in making these decisions is reflected by the agreement of experienced shoulder surgeons only 63.5% of the time regarding the treatment performed. When uncertainty occurs, patients may have reduced outcomes as seen in the ORIF treatment group. (C) 2017 Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery Board of Trustees. All rights reserved.

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