Faculty, Staff and Student Publications
Publication Date
12-1-2025
Journal
The American Journal of Sports Medicine
DOI
10.1177/03635465251387333
PMID
41220248
PMCID
PMC12657664
PubMedCentral® Posted Date
11-11-2025
PubMedCentral® Full Text Version
Post-print
Abstract
Background: Meniscal preservation has been demonstrated to contribute to long-term knee health and has been a successful intervention in isolation and in patients with anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR). The long-term results of meniscal repair in the setting of revision ACLR have yet to be documented.
Purpose: To report the incidence of meniscal repair failures at the 6-year follow-up in a cohort of patients who underwent concurrent revision ACLR and primary meniscal repair.
Study design: Prospective cohort study; Level of evidence, 2.
Methods: All revision ACLRs with concomitant primary meniscal repair cases from a multicenter group between 2006 and 2011 were selected. Six-year follow-up was obtained to determine whether any subsequent surgery had occurred since their initial revision ACLR. If so, operative reports were obtained, whenever possible, to verify pathological condition and treatment.
Results: In total, 221 patients from 1234 revision ACLRs underwent concurrent primary meniscal repairs (18% of the cohort). There were 238 repairs performed: 173 medial and 65 lateral. The majority of these repairs (n = 181; 76%) were performed with an all-inside technique. Six-year surgical follow-up was obtained in 77% (171/221) of the cohort, or 189 of 238 (79%) of the repairs (136 medial, 53 lateral). The meniscal repair failure rate, defined as reoperation, was 16% (31/189) at 6 years. Of the 31 failures, 28 were medial (24 all-inside, 4 inside-out; 28/136 = 20.6% failure rate) and 3 were lateral (2 all-inside, 1 inside-out; 3/53 = 5.7% failure rate). Three medial failures were treated in conjunction with a subsequent repeat revision ACLR. Medial tears underwent reoperation for failure at a significantly higher rate than lateral tears (20.6% vs 5.7%; P = .01) and had a significantly shorter survival time compared with lateral tears (P = .02). No difference was found between the failure and nonfailure groups when it came to tear type, tear length, repair technique utilized, suture/implant type, or number of sutures used between the 2 groups.
Conclusion: Meniscal repair in the revision ACLR setting has a 16% failure rate at 6 years. Failure rates for medial tears (20.6%) were found to be higher than that for lateral tears (5.7%), which aligns with previous studies in both the revision and primary ACLR setting.
Keywords
Humans, Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction, Reoperation, Male, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Adult, Prospective Studies, Young Adult, Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries, Menisci, Tibial, Tibial Meniscus Injuries, Adolescent, Middle Aged, anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction, revision, meniscal repair, outcomes
Published Open-Access
yes
Recommended Citation
Fox, Jake A; Huston, Laura J; Haas, Amanda K; et al., "Meniscal Repair in the Setting of Revision Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction: 6-Year Follow-up Results From the MARS Cohort" (2025). Faculty, Staff and Student Publications. 5922.
https://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/uthgsbs_docs/5922
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