JSES International - 2026-05-01 - Journal Article
Glenoid defects in revision shoulder arthroplasty may be treated with coracoid autograft with reliable short-term results.
Satalich J, Wall K, Wiley N, Macksood J, Elhassan B, Lohre R
Topics
Key Takeaway
Coracoid autograft for contained glenoid defects in revision shoulder arthroplasty yielded 0% baseplate failure and 11.1% overall revision rate at mean 5.0 months follow-up in 27 patients.
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Summary
This single-institution retrospective study evaluated coracoid autograft for contained glenoid bone defects during revision shoulder arthroplasty across four failure etiologies. Coracoid volume and length exceeded defect volume and depth (P<0.001), confirming dimensional adequacy, though coracoid diameter was not significantly different from defect height/width (P=0.09). At mean 5.0 months, no baseplate failures occurred; VAS improved from 7.6 to 1.8 and SSV improved from 23.4% to 69.7% (both P≤0.001).
Key Limitation
Mean follow-up of 5.0 months is too short to determine graft incorporation rates or long-term baseplate survival, which is the primary outcome of interest in revision glenoid reconstruction.
Original Abstract
BACKGROUND
Glenoid bone defects are common after failed arthroplasty or fracture fixation. Allograft or autograft reconstruction may be used to fill defects, however, may have increased failure rates or add to patient morbidity, respectively. We hypothesize that coracoid autograft can effectively fill contained glenoid defects and secondarily hypothesize that coracoid autograft has a low failure rate in early post-operative follow-up.
METHODS
A retrospective chart review was performed of all patients receiving coracoid autograft for glenoid bone defects during revision shoulder arthroplasty at a single institution, performed by 2 surgeons between 2020 and 2024. Pre-operative radiographs and computed tomography scans were analyzed to describe coracoid morphology and glenoid bone defects. Post-operative radiographs were analyzed for distalization shoulder angle, lateralization shoulder angle, and lateral humeral offset. Patient demographics and pre-operative and post-operative patient-reported outcome measures were collected.
RESULTS
Twenty-seven patients met criteria and were included for analysis. The average patient age was 67.2 ± 9.7 years (range 39-83 years). Average follow-up was 5.0 ± 4.6 months (range 1-17 months). Revisions were performed for the following indications: 9 (33.3%) patients with a failed hemiarthroplasty or hemiarthroplasty antibiotic spacer, 8 (29.6%) failed anatomic total shoulder arthroplasties, 8 (29.6%) reverse shoulder arthroplasties with baseplate failure, and 2 (7.4%) patients with post-traumatic glenoid injury from failed open reduction internal fixation.The average coracoid volume was significantly greater than the average defect volume ( P < .001), and the average coracoid length was significantly greater than the average defect maximum depth ( P < .001). The average coracoid diameter was smaller than the average defect height or width ( P = .09) but not to a significant degree. There were no baseplate failures at last follow-up, though an overall revision rate of 11.1% (n = 3/27) attributed to hematoma (n = 1/3; 33.3%), intentionally staged procedure (n = 1/3; 33.3%), and tendon transfer reconstruction for lack of external rotation (n = 1/3; 33.3%) was observed. Visual analog scale (7.6 ± 1.8 vs. 1.8 ± 3.0; P = .001) and subjective shoulder value (23.4 ± 13.8% vs. 69.7 ± 16.6%; P < .001) improved following surgery.
CONCLUSION
The coracoid is a viable autograft option for contained glenoid defects, showing similar dimensions to glenoid vault bone loss and no appreciable failures in early post-operative follow-up. The use of this specific autograft avoids morbidity and complications from iliac crest harvest, though longer follow-up is required to evaluate longitudinal risk of baseplate failure.