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Evidence-Based Orthopaedics   |    
Commentary
Fred F. Behrens, MD
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Department of Orthopaedics, New Jersey Medical School, Newark, New Jersey

The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery.  2001; 83:1281-a-1281 
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This systematic review by Bhandari and colleagues traces the history of the operative stabilization of open tibial shaft fractures over the past quarter of a century on the basis of a critical analysis of relevant randomized trials. During this time, the preferred device for the operative care of these lesions gradually evolved from plates to external fixators and, most recently, to intramedullary nails. Because many open fractures are unstable, the primary prerequisite for all of these devices is their ability to control length and alignment. Thus, intramedullary nails only became contenders once reliable locking mechanisms had been developed.
This carefully conducted review highlights the difficulties of carrying out a meta-analysis in a field characterized by a paucity of randomized trials and on a topic that encompasses large differences in disease severity and treatment modes. Indeed, there is a sense that the authors were straining to find a sufficient number of reliable publications. One of the included studies only exists as an abstract, and three had quality ratings of less than 40%. In the largest study that was included, grade-II lesions represented 49% of the fractures that were treated with nailing but only 31% of the fractures that were treated with external fixation. Grade III-B lesions comprised 12% of the fractures treated with nailing and 20% of the fractures treated with external fixation; does this represent "quasi-randomization" or selection bias? The inclusion of a study with unlocked nails was unfortunate because it limited the conclusions of the meta-analysis to the middle 55% of the tibial shaft and to fractures that were at least partially stable.
Despite these concerns, this systematic review clearly shows that, within the noted limitations, the use of locked intramedullary nailing results in lower reoperation rates than does the use of external fixation, particularly with respect to open fractures of grade-I to III-A severity. Because of the small numbers and the lack of an independent analysis, it is less clear to what extent this is also true for grade III-B lesions, particularly those that are heavily contaminated and those that require repeated débridement of the deep posterior compartment, which is less accessible after nail placement. The differences in outcome between reamed and unreamed nailing appear to be small and probably will require a large multicenter trial to determine if they are relevant at all.

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