# Return to sport after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair: epidemiology and prognostic factors in a Swiss multicentre cohort

**Authors:** Madlaina Matter, Laurent Audigé, Thomas Stojanov, Andreas Mueller, Matthias A Zumstein, Annabel Hayoz, Michael Schär, Claudio Rosso, Philipp Moroder, Doruk Akgün, Isabella Weiss, Eduardo Samaniego, Thomas Suter, Sebastian A Müller, Markus Saner, Claudia Haag-Schumacher, Mai LanDao Trong, Carlos Buitrago-Tellez, Julian Hasler, Ulf Riede, Beat Moor, Matthias Biner, Nicolas Gallusser, Christoph Spormann, Britta Hansen, Holger Durchholz, Gregory Cunningham, Alexandre Lädermann, Michael Schär, Rainer Egli, Stephanie Erdbrink, Kate Gerber, Paolo Lombardo, Johannes Weihs, Matthias Flury, Ralph Berther, Christine Ehrmann, Larissa Hübscher, David Schwappach, Karim Eid, Susanne Bensler, Yannick Fritz, Emanuel Benninger, Philemon Grimm, Markus Pisan, Markus Scheibel, Laurent Audigé, Daniela Brune, Marije de Jong, Stefan Diermayr, Marco Etter, Florian Freislederer, Michael Glanzmann, Cécile Grobet, Christian Jung, Fabrizio Moro, Ralph Ringer, Jan Schätz, Hans-Kaspar Schwyzer, Martina Wehrli, Barbara Wirth, Christian Candrian, Filippo Del Grande, Pietro Feltri, Giuseppe Filardo, Francesco Marbach, Florian Schönweger, Bernhard Jost, Michael Badulescu, Stephanie Lüscher, Fabian Napieralski, Lena Öhrström, Martin Olach, Jan Rechsteiner, Jörg Scheler, Christian Spross, Vilijam Zdravkovic, Matthias A Zumstein, Annabel Hayoz, Julia Müller-Lebschi, Karl Wieser, Paul Borbas, Samy Bouaicha, Roland Camenzind, Sabrina Catanzaro, Christian Gerber, Florian Grubhofer, Anita Hasler, Bettina Hochreiter, Roy Marcus, Farah Selman, Reto Sutter, Sabine Wyss, Christian Appenzeller-Herzog, Andreas MarcMüller, Soheila Aghlmandi, Cornelia Baum, Franziska Eckers, Kushtrim Grezda, Simone Hatz, Sabina Hunziker, Thomas Stojanov, Mohy Taha, Giorgio Tamborrini-Schütz, Ilona Ahlborn, Christopher Child, Aleksis Doert, Sebastian Ebert, David Endell, Nikitas Gkikopoulos, Abed Kourhani, Philipp Kriechling, Lucca Lacheta, Daniel Langthaler, Richard Niehaus, Raffaela Nobs, Frederick Schuster, Kathi Thiele, Béatrice Weber

PMC · DOI: 10.1136/bjsports-2025-110358 · British Journal of Sports Medicine · 2025-11-20

## TL;DR

This study examines how many patients return to sports after rotator cuff surgery and identifies factors that help predict successful recovery.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into prognostic factors for returning to sports after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair.

## Key findings

- Over half of patients achieved full return to sports within 24 months after surgery.
- Traumatic injury, high motivation, and higher sports activity levels were linked to better outcomes.
- Delayed passive mobilisation was associated with incomplete return to sports.

## Abstract

To investigate patients’ sports activities prior to and after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair (ARCR) and to better understand the relationship between patient, injury and sport-specific factors and return to sport (RTS) after ARCR.

As a part of the ARCR_Pred multicentre cohort study, patients from 19 centres undergoing primary ARCR for partial or complete rotator cuff tears between June 2020 and November 2021 were prospectively enrolled. Only patients who participated in sports prior to the injury were included. Injury characteristics, sports activity, sociodemographic, psychological and rehabilitation-specific factors, including the ability to return to any sport, were recorded preoperatively and postoperatively at 6 weeks, 6, 12 and 24 months. Prognostic factors for full RTS were identified using univariable and multivariable logistic regression analysis.

Of the 725 eligible patients, 37.2% were female, and the mean age was 57.7 years. Among all eligible patients, 57.4% achieved full RTS at 24 months, and 43.8% returned to their primary preinjury sport. Delayed initiation of passive mobilisation (risk ratio (RR) 0.94 (95% CI 0.89 to 0.99), p=0.017) was associated with incomplete RTS in univariable analysis. In multivariable analysis, favourable prognostic factors of full RTS included traumatic injury aetiology (RR 1.21 (95% CI 1.07 to 1.37), p=0.002), high motivation to RTS at baseline (RR 1.18 (95% CI 1.05 to 1.33), p=0.005), higher sports activity levels at 6 months (RR 1.04 (95% CI 1.01 to 1.07), p=0.002) and a low depression score at 12 months (RR 0.97 (95% CI 0.95 to 0.98), p<0.001).

Over half of ARCR patients reach full RTS within 24 months, with traumatic injuries, high motivation and higher sports activity at baseline having a more favourable prognosis. Our findings inform individualised postoperative rehabilitation and counselling regarding RTS following ARCR.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Injury (MESH:D014947), depression (MESH:D003866), rotator cuff (MESH:D000070636)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

51 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12916472/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12916472