TY - JOUR
T1 - Subacromial Decompression in Patients With Shoulder Impingement With an Intact Rotator Cuff
T2 - An Expert Consensus Statement Using the Modified Delphi Technique Comparing North American to European Shoulder Surgeons
AU - Delphi Panel
AU - Hohmann, Erik
AU - Glatt, Vaida
AU - Tetsworth, Kevin
AU - Alentorn-Geli, Eduard
AU - Bak, Klaus
AU - Beitzel, Knut
AU - Bøe, Berte
AU - Calvo, Emilio
AU - Di Giacomo, Giovanni
AU - Favard, Luc
AU - Franceschi, Francesco
AU - Funk, Lennard
AU - Glanzmann, Michael
AU - Imhoff, Andreas
AU - Lädermann, Alexandre
AU - Levy, Ofer
AU - Ludvigsen, Tom
AU - Milano, Giuseppe
AU - Moroder, Philipp
AU - Rosso, Claudio
AU - Siebenlist, Sebastian
AU - Abrams, Jeffrey
AU - Arciero, Robert
AU - Athwal, George
AU - Burks, Robert
AU - Gillespie, Robert
AU - Kibler, Ben
AU - Levine, William
AU - Mazzocca, Augustus
AU - Millett, Peter
AU - Ryu, Richard
AU - Safran, Marc
AU - Sanchez-Sotelo, Joaquin
AU - Savoie, Felix “Buddy”
AU - Sethi, Paul
AU - Shea, Kevin
AU - Verma, Nikhil
AU - Warner, Jon J.P.
AU - Weber, Stephen
AU - Wolf, Brian
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Arthroscopy Association of North America
PY - 2022/4
Y1 - 2022/4
N2 - Purpose: To perform a Delphi consensus for the treatment of patients with shoulder impingement with intact rotator cuff tendons, comparing North American with European shoulder surgeon preferences. Methods: Nineteen surgeons from North America (North American panel [NAP]) and 18 surgeons from Europe (European panel [EP]) agreed to participate and answered 10 open-ended questions in rounds 1 and 2. The results of the first 2 rounds were used to develop a Likert-style questionnaire for round 3. If agreement at round 3 was ≤60% for an item, the results were carried forward into round 4. For round 4, the panel members outside consensus (>60%, <80%) were contacted and asked to review their response. The level of agreement and consensus was defined as 80%. Results: There was agreement on the following items: impingement is a clinical diagnosis; a combination of clinical tests should be used; other pain generators must be excluded; radiographs must be part of the workup; magnetic resonance imaging is helpful; the first line of treatment should always be physiotherapy; a corticosteroid injection is helpful in reducing symptoms; indication for surgery is failure of nonoperative treatment for a minimum of 6 months. The NAP was likely to routinely prescribe nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NAP 89%; EP 35%) and consider steroids for impingement (NAP 89%; EP 65%). Conclusions: Consensus was achieved for 16 of the 71 Likert items: impingement is a clinical diagnosis and a combination of clinical tests should be used. The first line of treatment should always be physiotherapy, and a corticosteroid injection can be helpful in reducing symptoms. The indication for surgery is failure of no-operative treatment for a minimum of 6 months. The panel also agreed that subacromial decompression is a good choice for shoulder impingement if there is evidence of mechanical impingement with pain not responding to nonsurgical measures. Level of Evidence: Level V, expert opinion.
AB - Purpose: To perform a Delphi consensus for the treatment of patients with shoulder impingement with intact rotator cuff tendons, comparing North American with European shoulder surgeon preferences. Methods: Nineteen surgeons from North America (North American panel [NAP]) and 18 surgeons from Europe (European panel [EP]) agreed to participate and answered 10 open-ended questions in rounds 1 and 2. The results of the first 2 rounds were used to develop a Likert-style questionnaire for round 3. If agreement at round 3 was ≤60% for an item, the results were carried forward into round 4. For round 4, the panel members outside consensus (>60%, <80%) were contacted and asked to review their response. The level of agreement and consensus was defined as 80%. Results: There was agreement on the following items: impingement is a clinical diagnosis; a combination of clinical tests should be used; other pain generators must be excluded; radiographs must be part of the workup; magnetic resonance imaging is helpful; the first line of treatment should always be physiotherapy; a corticosteroid injection is helpful in reducing symptoms; indication for surgery is failure of nonoperative treatment for a minimum of 6 months. The NAP was likely to routinely prescribe nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NAP 89%; EP 35%) and consider steroids for impingement (NAP 89%; EP 65%). Conclusions: Consensus was achieved for 16 of the 71 Likert items: impingement is a clinical diagnosis and a combination of clinical tests should be used. The first line of treatment should always be physiotherapy, and a corticosteroid injection can be helpful in reducing symptoms. The indication for surgery is failure of no-operative treatment for a minimum of 6 months. The panel also agreed that subacromial decompression is a good choice for shoulder impingement if there is evidence of mechanical impingement with pain not responding to nonsurgical measures. Level of Evidence: Level V, expert opinion.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.arthro.2021.09.031
DO - 10.1016/j.arthro.2021.09.031
M3 - Article
C2 - 34655764
AN - SCOPUS:85123065420
SN - 0749-8063
VL - 38
SP - 1051
EP - 1065
JO - Arthroscopy - Journal of Arthroscopic and Related Surgery
JF - Arthroscopy - Journal of Arthroscopic and Related Surgery
IS - 4
ER -