Purpose: To evaluate the long-term clinical, patient-reported and radiological outcome of patients reconstructed for anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) insufficiency. We wanted to examine the relationship between clinical findings and patient-reported scores.
Methods: The 96 first successive patients that underwent ACL reconstruction using transtibial technique, hamstrings autograft and tunnel placement ad modum Howell were evaluated 10 years post-operatively. Subjective outcomes were Lysholm score, IKDC 2000 subjective score and Tegner activity scale. The clinical examination included evaluation of rotational and sagittal laxity. Evaluation of osteoarthritis was done radiologically.
Results: Eighty-three patients (86%) were available for follow-up at mean 10.2 years post-operatively. Three patients had revision ACL surgery prior to the 10-year evaluation. The mean Lysholm score, subjective IKDC 2000 score and Tegner activity scale were 89 (SD 13), 83 (SD 15) and 5 (range, 3-9), respectively. Six patients (8%) had moderate or severe osteoarthritis. Eighty-six per cent of patients had normal or near-normal anterior-posterior ACL laxity. Twenty per cent of patients had positive pivot shift and 42 % had a pivot glide. The former group had a significant lower Lysholm score compared to the rest of the patients.
Conclusions: Although the mean Lysholm score was classified as good (89) at the 10-year follow-up, a positive pivot shift was found in 20% of these patients. Compared to patients with normal rotational laxity or pivot glide, this patient group reported significant lower subjective satisfaction at the long-term follow-up.
Level of evidence: Case series, level IV.