JSES - 2026-05-21 - Journal Article; Review
Statin Therapy Is Not Associated with Inferior Postoperative Outcomes After Arthroscopic Rotator Cuff Repair: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.
Ahmad A, Khan M, Ghayyad K, Oshikoya O, Goltz D, Huffman GR
Topics
Key Takeaway
Statin use after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair was not associated with increased retear risk (RR=1.14; 95% CI 0.54–2.42) and was associated with a significantly lower revision surgery rate (RR=0.83; 95% CI 0.70–1.00) compared to non-users across 14,483 patients.
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Summary
This systematic review and meta-analysis asked whether statin use affects structural healing, revision rates, and patient-reported outcomes after ARCR. Seven studies (1 Level II, 6 Level III) were pooled; retear rates were equivalent between groups (RR=1.14, P=.73), ASES score differences were non-significant (MD=-1.56, P=.43), and revision surgery was modestly but significantly lower in statin users (RR=0.83, P=.04), though that result was driven by a single large administrative database study.
Key Limitation
The revision surgery benefit is driven by a single large administrative database study with inherent confounding by indication, comorbidity coding variability, and inability to verify statin adherence or dosing.
Original Abstract
INTRODUCTION
Despite historical concerns regarding muscle and tendon toxicity, preclinical studies suggest statins may exert anti-inflammatory and anti-fibrotic effects relevant to rotator cuff tendon-bone healing. Clinical studies of statin use after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair (ARCR) report mixed results with respect to tendon healing, revision surgery, and functional outcomes. This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluated postoperative healing and patient-reported outcomes between statin users and non-statin users following ARCR.
METHODS
PubMed, Scopus, the Cochrane Library, and Web of Science were systematically searched from database inception through November 30, 2025, yielding 810 records for screening, of which six high-quality and one moderate-quality study were included based on the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. Studies compared postoperative outcomes between statin users and non-statin users following ARCR, with outcomes including structural healing or retear, revision surgery, and patient-reported outcome measures such as the American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons (ASES) score and visual analog scale (VAS) pain score.
RESULTS
One Level II and six Level III studies comprising 7,653 statin users and 6,830 non-statin controls were included. Retear was assessed using postoperative magnetic resonance imaging based on loss of tendon integrity. Meta-analysis demonstrated no significant difference in retear rates between statin and non-statin users (RR = 1.14; 95% CI, 0.54-2.42; P = .73). Revision surgery risk was significantly lower among statin users (RR = 0.83; 95% CI, 0.70-1.00; P = .04), though this analysis was heavily weighted by a large administrative database study. Improvements in ASES scores (MD = -1.56; 95% CI, -5.39 to 2.28; P = .43) and VAS pain scores (SMD = 0.22; 95% CI, -0.11 to 0.55; P = .19) were comparable between groups.
CONCLUSION
Statin use was not associated with increased retear risk or worse functional outcomes after ARCR but was associated with lower revision surgery rates. Postoperative failure may be more closely associated with underlying hyperlipidemia status than statin exposure alone; however, future lipid-stratified studies are needed to clarify the relationship between dyslipidemia, statin therapy, and postoperative risk.