A worldwide perspective on chronic Achilles tendon rupture: An ESSKA AFAS survey initiative (2026)

Type of publication:

Journal article

Author(s):

Vide, Joao; Santos, Francisco; Dantas, Sofia; Seica, Emanuel; Caetano, Joao; Mendes, Daniel; Sousa, Manuel Resende; Anderson, Mette; Guelfi, Matteo; Hong, Choon Chiet; van Dijk, Pim; Spennacchio, Pietro; Cordier, Guillaume; van Dijk, Niek; Ling, Samuel; Hua, Yinghui; Vega, Jordi; Fernandes, Pedro; *Carmont, Michael.

Citation:

Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy. 2026 Feb 06.

Abstract:

PURPOSE: Management of chronic Achilles tendon ruptures (CATR) varies according to patient and injury characteristics, but clear guidelines regarding the evaluation and treatment options are still lacking. This study aims to identify tendencies regarding the evaluation and management of CATR among foot and ankle orthopaedic surgeons. The research question is if there is any tendency regarding evaluation, preoperative planning, choice of surgical approach and technique for management of CATR.

METHODS: A web-based questionnaire was distributed through 56 national and international foot and ankle orthopaedic societies. Replies were pooled and analysed. A 'main tendency' was considered when 75% of the participants chose the same treatment method, a 'tendency' for 50%-75%, and 'no tendency' when less than 50% choose the same method.

RESULTS: A total of 667 orthopaedic surgeons from 60 countries participated. Most respondents were experienced, specialised foot and ankle surgeons; however, 68% managed fewer than five CATR annually. MRI was the predominant imaging modality selected for surgical planning (88%). Gap size (80%) is the principal determinant of technique selection, followed by time from injury (61%) and then patient age (57%). Open repair was the most common technique (66%). End-to-end repair for defects <2 cm was the only treatment tendency (68%). Rehabilitation strategies were heterogeneous, though plaster immobilisation in equinus (55%), walker boot use for partial weight-bearing (90%), and physiotherapy initiation at 4-6 weeks following surgery were common tendencies. Compared with acute ruptures, functional outcomes were perceived as slightly worse in CATR (54%).

CONCLUSION: This study confirms significant variation in CATR management internationally. While end-to-end repair is a consistent choice for gaps smaller than 2 cm, the variability observed in responses reflects the lack of evidence and clear treatment algorithms.

LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level IV.

DOI: 10.1002/ksa.70327