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Arthroscopy - 2026-03-30 - Journal Article

Excessive Femoral Anteversion Associated With Worse Clinical Outcomes Following Hip Arthroscopic Surgery and Higher Prevalence of Anteroinferior Labral Tears in Patients With Femoroacetabular Impingement Syndrome.

Matsushita Y, Murata Y, Nakashima H, Shimizu T, Takada S, Nakayama K, Nishimura H, Fukuda H, Saito M, Sakai A, Uchida S

retrospective cohortLOE IIIn = 50 hips (34 normal anteversion, 16 excessive anteversion)Minimum 2 years.

Topics

arthroplastyshoulder elbowsports
PMID: 41912410DOI: 10.1002/arj.70077View on PubMed ->

Key Takeaway

Excessive femoral anteversion (>25°) is associated with significantly worse 2-year PROMs after hip arthroscopy for FAIS, including iHOT12 scores of 79.1 vs 95.1, and a 75% vs 29.4% prevalence of anteroinferior labral tears.

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Summary

This study compared intraoperative findings and 2-year clinical outcomes between FAIS patients with normal femoral anteversion (10°–25°) and excessive anteversion (>25°) undergoing primary hip arthroscopy. The excessive anteversion group demonstrated significantly lower scores across all four PROMs (iHOT12, HOS-ADL, HOS-SP, mHHS), lower PASS achievement rates for iHOT12 (56.2% vs 88.2%) and HOS-ADL (62.5% vs 94.1%), and a 2.6-fold higher prevalence of anteroinferior labral tears. Three reoperations occurred exclusively in the excessive anteversion group, all with anteversion angles between 29° and 33.5°.

Key Limitation

The small sample size (n=16 in the excessive anteversion group) and retrospective design introduce selection bias and insufficient power to define a threshold anteversion angle at which outcomes become unacceptable.

Original Abstract

PURPOSE

To compare intraoperative findings associated with instability and clinical outcomes after hip arthroscopic femoroacetabular impingement syndrome (FAIS) surgery in patients with normal anteversion (NA) and excessive femoral anteversion (EA).

METHODS

Inclusion criteria were FAIS cases who underwent primary arthroscopic management from January 2016 to December 2019. Patients who met exclusion criteria, such as osteoarthritis (Tonnis grade ≧ 2), and patients with less than a 2-year follow-up were excluded. The remaining hips were divided into 2 groups: the NA group (femoral anteversion 10°-25°) and the EA group (femoral anteversion > 25°). Clinical outcomes were assessed using the International Hip Outcome Tool 12 (iHOT12), hip outcome score activity of daily living scale (HOS-ADL), hip outcome score activity of sports (HOS-SP), and modified Harris hip score (mHHS). Achievement rates for the patient acceptable symptomatic state (PASS) and the minimal clinically important difference (MCID) were also evaluated. Intraoperative findings suggestive of instability were analyzed.

RESULTS

The NA group included 34 hips, while the EA groups included 16 hips. Anteroinferior labral tears were significantly more prevalent in the EA group (75% vs 29.4%; P = .0051). Postoperative PROMs at 2 years were significantly worse in the EA group for iHOT12 (79.1 vs 95.1, P = .0017), HOS-ADL (91.2 vs 98.5, P = .0224), HOS-SP (83.3 vs 100, P = .0049), and mHHS (86.9 vs 96.8, P = .002). Regarding some PROMs, PASS achievement rates were also significantly lower in the EA group (iHot12: 56.2% vs 88.2%; P = .024,

HOS-ADL

62.5% vs 94.1%; P = .009), while no statistical difference was observed in MCID achievement rates. Three reoperations occurred in patients with EA, with femoral anteversion angles of 29°, 32.5°, and 33.5°.

CONCLUSIONS

Patients with EA had inferior outcomes of hip arthroscopy and a higher prevalence of anteroinferior labral tears.

LEVEL OF EVIDENCE

Level III, retrospective comparative case series.