ILLUSTRATIVE CASE
An otherwise healthy 45-year-old man sustained an acute right-side Achilles tendon rupture while playing tennis. He has not taken quinolones recently, has no history of previous Achilles tendon rupture, and prior to this injury had no difficulty walking. He presents initially to his primary care physician and wants advice: Does he need surgery?
Acute Achilles tendon rupture manifests as acute-onset pain and impaired plantar flexion.2 Older, active, male patients are at increased risk. There is disagreement among treating physicians regarding best practices for managing this common and debilitating injury. Prior clinical trials comparing operative to nonoperative management, as well as those comparing different surgical techniques, were limited by small sample sizes.3-5
A 2019 systematic review and meta-analysis that relied heavily on observational data suggested that nonoperative management carries greater risk for rerupture but lower risk for complications than surgical treatment, without differences in patient-reported functional outcomes.5 This 2022 RCT adds certainty to comparisons of surgical and nonoperative treatment.
STUDY SUMMARY
Equivalent outcomes but higher rates of rerupture for nonoperative patients
Norwegian investigators conducted a prospective, single-blind RCT at 4 treating facilities among patients ages 18 to 60 years with unilateral acute Achilles tendon rupture. A total of 554 patients were randomized in a 1:1:1 ratio to 1 of 3 groups: nonoperative treatment, open-repair surgery, or minimally invasive surgery. Ultimately, 526 patients who completed the intervention and at least 1 follow-up survey were included in the final analysis, which exceeded the number needed according to the pre-study 80% power calculation. Seventy-four percent of the patients were male, and the average age at time of injury was 40 years. Nearly all patients were classified as healthy or having only mild or well-controlled chronic illnesses.
Before randomization, patients completed the 10-item Achilles tendon Total Rupture Score (ATRS) questionnaire to gauge their pre-injury baseline function. ATRS is scored 0 to 100, with lower scores indicating more limitation in function; a clinically important difference is 8 to 10 points. There were no statistically significant differences in pre-injury baseline ATRS (92.7, 93.9, and 94.2 for the nonoperative, open-repair, and minimally invasive groups, respectively) or other patient characteristics among the 3 groups.
For all participants, application of a below-the-knee equinus cast with plantar flexion was performed within 72 hours after the injury. Patients in the surgical arms had surgery within 8 days, followed by application of a new cast. For all study groups, the cast was maintained for a total of 2 weeks, followed by 6 weeks of weight-bearing in an ankle-foot orthosis with heel wedges that were gradually reduced in number. All patients were treated with identical serial immobilization and physical therapy programs for 36 weeks.
The primary study outcome was change from baseline ATRS at 12 months after injury. Secondary outcomes included ATRS at 3 and 6 months and domain-specific quality-of-life scores (from the 36-Item Short Form Health Survey; SF-36) at 6 and 12 months. Patients also underwent physical testing of their Achilles tendon function at 6 and 12 months, during which they wore knee-high socks in order to blind the evaluators. Reruptures were recorded as secondary outcomes as well.
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