PurposeTo examine the frequency of patellofemoral joint (PFJ) osteoarthritis (OA) and its symptoms in the long-term course of open-wedge high tibial osteotomy (OWHTO).MethodsWe analyzed 113 joints of 91 patients. OA and osteonecrosis (ON) developed in 91 and 22 joints, after an average postoperative period of 127.5 ± 19.5 months. For X-ray evaluation, the standing femorotibial angle (FTA), % mechanical axis (%MA), Caton–Deschamps index (CDI), patellar tilt angle (TA), lateral patellar shift (LPS), and PFJ space width (medial [MJS] and lateral [LJS]) were analyzed. PFJ-associated symptoms were evaluated using the hospital for special surgery patellar score (HSS-PS) and knee injury and osteoarthritis outcome score patellofemoral subscale (KOOS-PF). Statistical analysis was performed with paired and unpaired t tests, and a risk rate of less than 1% was significantly judged.ResultsPreoperative FTA and CDI decreased from 180.8° to 170.0° and 0.88 to 0.70 at the final follow-up. Preoperative %MA lateralized from 20.8 to 66.0 at the final follow-up. TA and LPS values decreased significantly compared with before surgery until plate removal. The MJS and LJS significantly decreased, and OA with a joint space < 3 mm occurred in 14 cases. However, HSS-PS and KOOS-PF scores were not significantly different between the groups with and without OA.ConclusionPFJ OA occurred in 12.4% cases in the long-term postoperative course of OWHTO; however, no symptomatic difference was found in the group with or without OA.
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