Latest News

Visionary Surgery Saved Pitcher’s Arm. Now Even Children Get It


 

In 1974, Tommy John of the Los Angeles Dodgers was 31 and a 12-year veteran of Major League Baseball when he became the unwitting vanguard of a revolution in baseball and orthopedics. Fifty years later, Mr. John might not be a candidate for the latest advances to a procedure that bears his name.

The southpaw pitcher had faced the abrupt end of his career when, after one fateful delivery, he found himself unable to throw to home. So he took a gamble on the surgical equivalent of a Hail Mary: the reconstruction of a torn ligament in his pitching elbow.

The experiment was a wild success. Mr. John pitched— and better than he had before — for another 14 seasons, retiring in 1989 at the age of 46. How much better? After the surgery, he tallied three 20-win seasons compared with none before the operation, and he finished among the top five vote-getters for the annual Cy Young Award three times. He was named an All-Star once before the surgery and three times after.

The triumph notwithstanding, Tommy John now cautions against Tommy John surgery. What’s given him and clinicians pause is a trend in recent years of ever-younger athletes who undergo the procedure.

Along with the surgical improvements in repairing a torn ulnar collateral ligament (UCL) is a demographic shift toward school-aged athletes who get it. By 2014, one study concluded that 67.4% of UCL reconstruction surgeries were performed on athletes between 16 and 20 years of age. Some patients are still in Little League when they undergo the procedure.

Experts say these athletes have weakened their UCLs through overuse. They disagree on whether to call it an “epidemic,” but if it is, “the vaccine is awareness” against throwing too hard and too often, said Eric Makhni, MD, an orthopedic surgeon at Henry Ford Health in Detroit.

From Career-Ending to Routine

Mr. John’s entry into baseball and orthopedic lore was initially slow, but the trickle turned into a tide. After Frank Jobe, MD, swapped a healthy tendon from John’s right wrist for his worn and torn left UCL on September 25, 1974, he didn’t perform his second surgery for another 1194 days. By the time “Tommy John surgery” became a recognized phrase, Mr. John was still active but only 14 professional baseball players had undergone the operation.

Prior to the start of spring training this year, an oft-cited database listed 366 pro players who’d undergone the operation.

“Before Tommy John, that was a career-ending injury,” said Grant E. Garrigues, MD, an orthopedic surgeon at Midwest Orthopaedics at RUSH in Chicago, who called Mr. John “a pure revolutionary.”

Tommy John surgery is “the only one that I can think of that is named after the patient rather than the doctor who first did it,” said Patrick McCulloch, MD, an orthopedic surgeon in Houston and a team physician for the Astros.

Dr. McCulloch, who performs about 25 UCL repairs a year, said that by recent estimates, one-third of pro pitchers had had some sort of surgical repair. He hesitated to call the increasing number of operations an epidemic but acknowledged that the ingredients exist for more elbow trauma among baseball players.

“More people are playing more often, and people are bigger and stronger and throwing harder,” he said.

Either way, Dr. McCulloch said, “the procedure is a victim of its own success” because it is “just done phenomenally well.”

The surgery is now commonplace — perhaps too commonplace, said David W. Altchek, MD, attending surgeon and co-chief emeritus at Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City.

Dr. Altchek played a key role in the popularity of the operation. Twenty-two years after Mr. John’s surgery, he helped develop a variation of the procedure called the docking technique.

Whereas Dr. Jobe sutured Mr. John’s replacement graft to itself, “we developed a different way of tying it over a bone bridge, which was more secure and more easy to tension,” Dr. Altchek explained.

The advance meant less drilling into bone and enabled surgeons to avoid moving a problem-free ulnar nerve or removing the flexor-pronator muscle that protects the elbow from stress. “The trauma of the surgery is significantly less,” he said. “We just made it a lot easier very quickly,” cutting the surgery time from 2 hours to 30-40 minutes.

Maybe the surgery became too easy, said Dr. Altchek, who estimates he has done 2000 of them over the past 30 years. “I don’t want to condemn my colleagues, but there are a lot of people doing the surgery,” he said. “And not a lot of people are doing a lot of them, and they don’t know the nuances of doing the surgery.”

The older procedures are known as the “full Tommy John”; each has a 12- to 18-month healing process, with a success rate of 80%-85%. Pitchers typically sit out a season while recovering.

Brandon Erickson, MD, an orthopedic surgeon at Rothman Orthopaedic Institute in New York City, said that in younger patients he has recently turned more often to the suture of the future: an internal brace that provides a repair rather than reconstruction.

The procedure, pioneered by Felix H. Savoie III, MD, the Ray J. Haddad Professor of Orthopaedics at Tulane University School of Medicine in New Orleans, and Jeffrey R. Dugas, MD, of Andrews Sports Medicine & Orthopaedic Center in Birmingham, Alabama, uses collagen-coated tape that looks like a shoelace and provides a scaffold that Dr. McCulloch said “is inductive to healing and growth of ligament tissue.”

The brace is intended for an “overhead” athlete (mostly baseball players but also javelin throwers and gymnasts) whose UCL is torn on only one side but is otherwise in good shape. In a pitcher the same age as Mr. John was when Dr. Jobe performed the first procedure, “that ligament may not be of very good quality,” Dr. McCulloch said. “It may have thickened. It may have calcifications.” But for a high-school junior with aspirations to pitch in college or beyond without “way too many miles on the elbow,” the approach is a good fit. The healing process is as little as 6 months.

“The ones who have a good ligament are very likely to do well,” said Dr. Erickson, an assistant team doctor for the Philadelphia Phillies.

“If the patient’s ligament is generally ‘good’ with only a tear, the InternalBrace procedure may be used to repair the native ligament. On the other end of the spectrum, if the patient’s ligament is torn and degenerative the surgeon may opt to do a UCL reconstruction using an auto or allograft — ie, Tommy John surgery,” Allen Holowecky, senior product manager of Arthrex of Naples, Florida, the maker of the InternalBrace, told this news organization. “Before UCL repair, Tommy John surgery was the only real treatment option. We tend to see repairs done on younger patients since their ligament hasn’t seen years of use-damage.”

Pages

Recommended Reading

Massive Rotator Cuff Tears in Patients Older Than Sixty-five: Indications for Cuff Repair versus Reverse Total Shoulder Arthroplasty
MDedge Surgery
Fragility Fractures: Diagnosis and Treatment
MDedge Surgery
The Characteristics of Surgeons Performing Total Shoulder Arthroplasty: Volume Consistency, Training, and Specialization
MDedge Surgery
Arthroscopic SLAP IIb Repair Using Knot-Tying Versus Knotless Suture Anchors: Is There a Difference?
MDedge Surgery
Simple prevention strategies can lessen postoperative delirium after orthopedic surgery
MDedge Surgery
Shoulder arthroplasty template data require careful interpretation
MDedge Surgery
POISE-3 backs wider use of tranexamic acid in noncardiac surgery 
MDedge Surgery
‘Where does it hurt?’: Primary care tips for common ortho problems
MDedge Surgery
Add AFib to noncardiac surgery risk evaluation: New support
MDedge Surgery
New ESC guidelines for cutting CV risk in noncardiac surgery
MDedge Surgery