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. 2015 Feb 11;2(1):1–14. doi: 10.1016/j.asmart.2014.11.003

Table 4.

Clinical and structural outcomes in the early and delayed rehabilitation groups after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair in various RCTs, systematic reviews, and meta-analysis.

Author, y Type of study Comparative group characteristics (early vs. delayed rehabilitation) Outcome
Cuff and Pupello (2012)173 RCT, 64 patients Crescent tear; TOE repair Functional result: No difference between the two groups
Structural result: Better healing rate in the delayed group (91% vs. 85%, p > 0.5)
Lee et al (2012)176 Comparative study, 68 patients Medium–large-sized tear; SR repair Functional result: Better recovery in 3 months but no difference at 1 year
Structural result: Better healing of cuff in the delayed rehabilitation group vs. the aggressive group (91.2 % vs. 76.7 %, p = 0.105)
Keener et al (2014)174 RCT, 124 patients Small–medium-sized tears; TOE repair No difference in functional or structural outcome
Kluczynski et al (2014)175 Systematic review and meta-analysis, 28 studies Small–large-sized tear;
TO, SR, DR repairs
Risk of retear was high for tear size > 5 cm in the early group vs. the late group repaired by DR (56.4% vs. 20%, p = 0.002; RR = 2.82) and for all repair methods combined (52.2% vs. 22.6%, p = 0.01; RR = 2.31)
Ross et al (2014)177 Review of seven studies (RCTs and other types) All types of tear and repair The accelerated group has a trend for better pain, ROM, and functional scores, but slightly higher retear rates as compared with the slow rehabilitation group

DR = double row; RCT = randomized controlled trial; ROM = range of motion; SR = single row; TO = transosseous; TOE = transosseous equivalent; RR = relative risk.