Percutaneous Achilles tendon tenotomy in clubfoot with a blade or a needle: A single-centre randomized controlled noninferiority trial

Manon Pigeolet, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels, Belgium
Jabbar Ghufran Syed, The Indus Hospital, Karachi, Pakistan
Sadia Ahmed, The Indus Hospital, Karachi, Pakistan
Mansoor Ali Khan, Aga Khan University
Muhammad A. Chinoy, The Indus Hospital, Karachi, Pakistan

Abstract

Aims: The gold standard for percutaneous Achilles tendon tenotomy during the Ponseti treatment for idiopathic clubfoot is a tenotomy with a No. 15 blade. This trial aims to establish the technique where the tenotomy is performed with a large-bore needle as noninferior to the gold standard.
Methods: We randomized feet from children aged below 36 months with idiopathic clubfoot on a 1:1 basis in either the blade or needle group. Follow-up was conducted at three weeks and three months postoperatively, where dorsiflexion range, Pirani scores, and complications were recorded. The noninferiority margin was set at 4° difference in dorsiflexion range at three months postoperatively.
Results: The blade group had more dorsiflexion at both follow-up consultations: 18.36° versus 18.03° (p = 0.115) at three weeks and 18.96° versus 18.26° (p = 0.001) at three months. The difference of the mean at three months 0.7° is well below the noninferiority margin of 4°. There was no significant difference in Pirani scores. The blade group had more extensive scar marks at three months than the needle group (8 vs 2). No major complications were recorded.
Conclusion: The needle tenotomy is noninferior to the blade tenotomy for usage in Ponseti treatment for idiopathic clubfoot in children aged below 36 months.