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May 15, 2021
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Talectomy yielded good clinical outcomes in pediatric patients with clubfoot deformity

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Results presented at the Pediatric Orthopaedic Society of North America Annual Meeting showed talectomy for treatment of clubfoot deformity yielded good clinical outcomes with correction maintained into adulthood.

Perspective from Pooya Hosseinzadeh, MD

Jill E. Larson, MD, and colleagues performed a retrospective review of data from all patients with non-idiopathic clubfoot deformity who underwent talectomy from 1975 to 2010. Of the 625 patients identified with clubfoot deformity, researchers noted 53 feet underwent talectomy.

Of the 31 feet that met full follow-up and inclusion criteria, results showed 18 patients had spina bifida and 13 patients had arthrogryposis.

Jill E. Larson
Jill E. Larson

“A total of 17 feet were recorded as having recurrent deformity. Of those, 11 had residual forefoot adduction or supination,” Larson said in her presentation. “However, only three of these feet had a poor result at final follow-up and only two feet required further surgery to achieve a ‘good’ result.”

Patients with residual or recurrent clubfoot deformity had a worse prognosis at final follow-up, and all patients reported a poor result, according to Larson.

At final follow-up, Larson noted talectomy had an overall success rate of 77.4%, with patients who underwent talectomy before 5 years of age having favorable results. She added the diagnosis of spina bifida or arthrogryposis did not influence recurrence, need for further surgery or final outcome at last visit.

“Ambulatory status as defined by a 3-1-1 on the functional mobility scale resulted in a 2.7- times decreased odds ratio of deformity recurrence and 2.4-times increased odds ratio of having a good outcome at final follow-up,” Larson said.

She also noted patients had fewer total surgeries per foot when talectomy was performed as the primary corrective surgery compared with patients who underwent salvaged talectomy.

“A midterm and long-term subgroup analysis found no statistically significant difference between those patients who had follow-up from 5 to 15 years or those who had greater than 15-year follow-up,” Larson said.