Quadriceps tendon autograft and platelet rich plasma injection for chronic Achilles tendon tears
We are surgeons: it is ingrained in our DNA that we wish to leave our mark. We can do so in different ways: discovering a new condition, operating on more patients than anybody else, operating faster than our peers (though fast surgery is not necessarily good surgery), or describing new techniques or combining techniques in a way which had not been described before.
Arriaza et al. (1) built on the work of Besse et al. (2), who originally described the use of a bone-tendon graft from the extensor apparatus of the knee, to report their endeavour in the management of chronic tears of the Achilles tendon. Chronic tears of the Achilles tendon are increasingly common, are difficult to manage, the management algorithms are not evidence based, and the results of reconstructive procedures are often unsatisfactory.
In this manuscript, in addition to an ipsilateral bone-tendon autografts, the authors used a form of platelet rich plasma, namely plasma rich in growth factors, to augment their construct (3), perhaps unsurprisingly given how common the use of platelets derived devices is in their country.
I like to have alternatives in the management of my own patients with chronic tears of the Achilles tendon, and autografts are safe, cheap, and plentiful. Surely a graft harvested from the extensor apparatus of the knee satisfies these basic requirements. However, is it the best choice?
Regarding the extensor apparatus of the knee, anterior cruciate ligament reconstructive surgeons know that anterior knee pain after harvest is a scourge, and it figures prominently as the side effects and possible complications when we obtain informed consent from our patients. In addition, fracture of the patella is a well described complication following harvest of such grafts (4).
I have been trained in a system which engrained in me the mantra of ‘Keep it simple for the simple orthopod’, and I was also reminded that ‘You need an intelligent guy to tackle complicated things, but the really bright ones make them simple’. In this respect, therefore, I must confess that I would not want to complicate my life using the extensor apparatus of the knee as a donor site for chronic Achilles tendon reconstruction. As Arriaza et al. acknowledge, two perfectly suitable local grafts are the tendon of peroneus brevis and the tendon of flexor hallucis longus. The classical paradigm was that a reconstruction of the Achilles tendon had to be performed so that the graft connects the proximal to the distal stump, thus anatomically restoring the continuity of the gastrosoleus-Achilles tendon-calcaneus complex. Recently, we have shown that this is not the case, and that the tendon of peroneus brevis or the tendon of flexor hallucis longus can each be transferred in a minimally invasive fashion into the posterior wall of the calcaneus without reconstructing the gap in an anatomical fashion, with excellent results (5).
In gaps greater than 6 cm, we harvest the tendon of semitendinosus from the popliteal fossa, we double it, and use it as a free graft to perform an anatomical reconstruction, again in a minimally invasive fashion (5). The tendon of semitendinosus is widely used for knee ligament reconstruction, its harvest carries little morbidity, and promptly regenerates (6).
We are left with the use of platelet rich plasma. Sánchez et al. used it in primary repair of Achilles tendon rupture, with impressive results (3). However, later larger studies have questioned this approach, and showed that the addition of PRP to the surgical management of Achilles tendon rupture does not appear to offer superior clinical and functional results (7,8). Paradoxically, an Achilles tendon specific functional score was lower in the PRP group, suggesting a detrimental effect (8). A recent multicentre, parallel-group, participant- and outcome assessor-blinded randomised controlled trial comparing PRP with placebo in patients with an acute Achilles tendon tear treated non-surgically showed that that PRP offers no patient benefit (9).
At the end of all this, it is legitimate to ask myself whether I would use a quadriceps tendon autograft for which (I) I need to work in a less than optimal position, as described by Arriaza et al.; (II) I would have to produce an extensive wound in a region notorious for its high rate of post-operative wound healing problems; (III) the length of the soft tissue component of the graft is limited. Also, regarding the use of the many formulations of platelet rich plasma, there is no doubt that some groups use this potentially powerful device extensively, and report impressive results. It is a pity, however, that these results vane into non-significance and null clinical relevance when appropriately planned, conducted and powered randomized controlled trials using clinically relevant validated outcome measures, performed by independent researchers with no conflicts of interest, are published.
Acknowledgments
Funding: None.
Footnote
Conflicts of Interest: The author has completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form (available at http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/atm.2020.04.32). The author has no conflicts of interest to declare.
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References
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