Abstract
This systematic review explored the utility of preoperative magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI) as a tool for predicting intraoperative graft size for anterior cruciate ligament
(ACL) reconstruction. Three databases (EMBASE, PubMed, and MEDLINE) were searched
in November 2017 for English-language studies of all levels of evidence that aimed
to correlate preoperative MRI measurements of common primary ACL autograft sources
to intraoperative measurements of the harvested graft. Two reviewers applied predetermined
inclusion/exclusion criteria to independently complete title, abstract, and full-text
review of eligible studies. Data abstraction, quality assessment, and descriptive
statistics are presented. A systematic screen of 930 titles resulted in 14 studies
satisfying inclusion/exclusion criteria. These studies examined 762 patients of mean
age 28.6 (9–67) years, with 37.3% females. Comparing the correlation of preoperative
MRI measurements to intraoperative harvested measures, the strength was very highly
positive for quadriceps tendon (QT) (one study, 29 patients, intraclass correlation
coefficient [ICC] = 0.96), highly positive for patellar tendon (two studies, 28 patients,
ICC: 0.77–0.87), negligible-highly positive for semitendinosus-only tendon (eight
studies, 439 patients, r: 0.16–0.81), and negligible-moderately positive for gracilis-only tendon (four studies,
143 patients, r: 0.29–0.59). When combined semitendinosus–gracilis tendon grafts were considered,
the correlation ranged from low-very highly positive (10 studies, 517 patients, r: 0.42–0.93). Preoperative MRI assessment of both QT and bone–patellar tendon–bone
autografts most highly correlates with intraoperative measurements of autograft diameter.
Considerable variability exists when viewing hamstring tendons either individually
or together, where most studies indicate at least a moderate correlation. This highlights
the advantage of MRI during the preoperative planning process in equipping the surgeon
with a better ability to ensure the diameter of the intended autograft will suffice.
This is a Level IV study, systematic review of Levels II to IV studies.
Keywords
magnetic resonance imaging - anterior cruciate ligament - autograft - size - correlation