Abstract

AbstractIntroductionSymptomatic osteochondritis dissecans (OCD) and traumatic osteochondral fractures (OCF) are treated with fixation with either metal or bioabsorbable device. We performed a comparative review of patients with OCD and traumatic OCF stabilised with Bio-Compression screws which are headless absorbable compression screws. Our aim was to determine whether there was a difference in outcomes between presentations.MethodsRetrospective single-centre cohort study of all patients with OCD and OCF treated with Bio-Compression screw between July 2017 and September 2022. All patients followed up until discharge with satisfactory clinical outcome. Primary outcome was return to theatre for ongoing pain or mechanical symptoms. Secondary outcome was evidence of fixation failure on follow-up MRI scan.Results20 patients included; 8 OCF and 12 OCD. Average age 21 (OCF), 24 (OCD). The most common location was patella (58%) in OCF or the medial femoral condyle (75%) in OCD. Traumatic defects were smaller (2.6cm2 vs 3.3cm2) although this was not statistically significant (p=0.28). In the OCF group one patient went on to have further surgery. There were no re-operations in the OCD group. Both groups had good outcomes and similar times to discharge. There was no evidence of fixation failure of Bio-Compression screws on MRI scans.ConclusionsWithin the limits of this relatively small cohort there is no significant difference between outcomes for OCD or traumatic OCF fixation with Bio-Compression screws. Both groups demonstrate good outcomes irrespective of the location or the aetiology of the fragment.

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