# Impaired patient-reported outcomes but preserved gait patterns 5–15 years after acetabular fracture compared with healthy controls

**Authors:** Selma Fensel-Merz, Elke Warmerdam, Marcel Orth, Tim Pohlemann, Emmanouil Liodakis, Bergita Ganse

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2026.1727785 · 2026-01-15

## TL;DR

Patients with acetabular fractures report worse health outcomes long-term, but their walking patterns remain normal compared to healthy individuals.

## Contribution

This study reveals a disconnect between subjective health outcomes and objective gait patterns in long-term acetabular fracture survivors.

## Key findings

- Patients showed significantly worse PROMIS scores for physical and mental health compared to controls.
- No differences in gait parameters were observed between patients and healthy controls.
- No correlation was found between PROMIS scores and gait parameters in patients.

## Abstract

Little is known about the long-term subjective patient experience after acetabular fracture and its relationship with changes in gait patterns. Worse outcomes were hypothesized compared with healthy control participants.

Patient-Reported Outcome Measure Information System (PROMIS) questionnaires and treadmill-based gait analyses were conducted. Twenty parameters derived from the ground-reaction force curve were analysed. One-way ANOVA, Mann‒Whitney U tests, and regression statistics were used to assess differences between patients and controls (26 participants) and correlations between PROMIS scores and gait parameters.

Twenty-six patients (19 men and 7 women, 52.09 ± 12.77 years) with previous acetabular fracture an average of 9.90 ± 2.97 years prior to the study were included, all with excellent or good quality of reduction. While significantly worse results were found in the fracture than in the control group for all tested PROMIS scores (Physical Health, p < 0.001; Mental Health, p < 0.001; Pain Interference, p = 0.011; Physical Function, p < 0.001), no changes were observed in the gait parameters. There was no correlation between the PROMIS scores and any of the gait parameters. Forty-six percent of patients reported occasional pain and twelve percent noted weather sensitivity.

Factors other than changes in gait pattern seem to cause worse PROMIS scores in patients after acetabular fracture.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** acetabular fracture (OMIM:142700), Pain (MESH:D010146), fracture (MESH:D050723)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12852339/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12852339