OBJECTIVES: (1) To develop an intervention for to support patients diagnosed with an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) rupture with decision-making regarding treatment. (2) To define evidence-based recommendations for the treatment of patients following an ACL rupture. DESIGN: Nominal group technique consensus study. SETTING: Online meetings with patients and key stakeholders working and receiving treatment in the National Health Service, UK. PARTICIPANTS: Consensus meetings composed of eight voting participants and five non-voting facilitators. Voting participants included five clinicians, one outpatient therapy manager and two patients with experience in an ACL rupture and reconstructive surgery. Non-voting facilitators supported group discussions and/or observed study procedures. This included a clinical academic expert, two methodology experts and two patient representatives. METHOD: Two online meetings were held. Pre-elicitation material was distributed ahead of the first meeting. Premeeting voting was conducted ahead of both meetings. A draft of the shared decision-making intervention and recommendations were shared ahead of the second meeting. Components were discussed and ranked for inclusion based on a 70% agreement threshold. RESULTS: The meetings led to the development of a shared decision-making intervention to support treatment decision-making following an ACL rupture. The intervention includes two components: (1) a patient information leaflet and key questions diagram and (2) option grid. The evidence-based recommendations encompass core components of treatment reaching the 70% threshold agreed by the group. The recommendations cover: (1) advice and education, (2) exercise guidance, (3) intervention delivery, (4) outcome measure use and (5) shared decision-making. CONCLUSION: This study has successfully developed a shared decision-making intervention to support ACL treatment decision-making, ready for testing in a future feasibility study. Evidence-based recommendations for the treatment of patients following ACL injury, ready for testing in a National Health Service (UK) setting, are also presented. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT05529511.
Journal article
Bmj open
18/07/2024
14
Adult orthopaedics, Knee, Musculoskeletal disorders, Orthopaedic sports trauma, Humans, Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries, Consensus, Decision Making, Shared, Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction, United Kingdom, Female, Male, Patient Participation