High posterior tibial slope is associated with higher failure rates in nonoperative management of primary anterior cruciate ligament injury
Svenja Heidecke, Nikolaus Kraml, David Haslhofer, Paul M. Schwarz, Tobias Gotterbarm, Philipp W. Winkler

TL;DR
A steeper slope at the back of the shin bone is linked to higher failure rates in non-surgical treatment of ACL injuries.
Contribution
Identifies posterior tibial slope as a risk factor for nonoperative ACL treatment failure.
Findings
82 out of 113 patients (73%) failed nonoperative ACL treatment.
Patients with treatment failure had significantly higher posterior tibial slope (PTS) than those without failure.
Each 1° increase in PTS increased treatment failure odds by 1.5 times.
Abstract
To evaluate the impact of posterior tibial slope (PTS) on patient‐reported outcome measures (PROMs) and treatment failure in patients with primary anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury who elected to undergo nonoperative treatment. Patients with primary ACL injury who underwent nonoperative treatment were included in this retrospective study. A chart review was conducted to collect demographic data. Medial PTS was measured on strict lateral radiographs using a standardised method. Validated PROMs were collected at final follow‐up. A correlation analysis was conducted to assess the relationship between PTS and PROMs. A logistic regression analysis was performed to assess whether PTS could predict failure of nonoperative treatment. Failure was defined as conversion to ACL reconstruction after a minimum of 3 months of nonoperative treatment. A total of 113 patients with a mean age of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsKnee injuries and reconstruction techniques · Foot and Ankle Surgery · Total Knee Arthroplasty Outcomes
