BACKGROUND: Shoulder instability and labral pathology are common in National Football League (NFL) players, yet contemporary return-to-play (RTP), return-to-performance (RTPf), and postreturn career longevity outcomes after surgical labral repair are incompletely characterized.
PURPOSE: To (1) describe RTP timing and rates after surgical labral repair, (2) quantify season-to-season changes in usage and performance versus matched controls, and (3) evaluate post-RTP career longevity.
STUDY DESIGN: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 3.
METHODS: Using publicly available NFL data (2015-2024), 111 labral repair episodes were identified and indexed to surgery date. RTP was defined as the first in-game snap after surgery, with rates summarized at 2, 6, 12 and 24 months and overall (ever RTP). For RTPf, episodes required ≥100 snaps in both a preindex season (T1) and a first post-RTP season (M1); 60 cases met criteria and were matched 1:2 to 120 controls by season and position group, with additional matching on age and T1 snap rate. Changes from T1→M1 (and T1→M2 when available) were compared between groups. Outcomes included usage (games, total snaps, snaps/game) and Pro Football Focus (PFF) season grades. Career longevity post-RTP was assessed using Kaplan-Meier and stratified Cox models.
RESULTS: Among 111 episodes, defensive backs (25.2%) and offensive linemen (21.6%) were the most common position groups. Overall, 86.5% returned at a median 265 days (IQR, 234-316); 3.6% returned within 6 months, 73.9% within 1 year, and 84.7% within 2 years. In the matched RTPf cohort (60 cases; 120 controls), usage changes from T1→M1 did not differ (all P > .05). Offensive PFF grade trended lower versus controls (Δdiff -3.78; P = .09), while defensive PFF grade declined significantly more (Δdiff -7.13; P = .01). In the M2 subset (34 cases; 68 controls), usage and offensive PFF remained nonsignificant, whereas defensive PFF remained significantly lower (Δdiff -10.12; P = .02). Career longevity did not differ between cases and controls by log-rank or stratified Cox analyses (all P > .05).
CONCLUSION: NFL players undergoing isolated labral repair demonstrated high RTP rates with preserved postreturn workload and career longevity versus matched controls. However, defensive players showed a sustained reduction in performance grades through 2 postreturn seasons, suggesting that RTP may not uniformly translate to RTPf and may vary by position.
Return to Play, Performance, and Career Longevity After Shoulder Labral Repair in the National Football League: A Matched Cohort Analysis.
TL;DR
BACKGROUND: Shoulder instability and labral pathology are common in National Football League (NFL) players, yet contemporary return-to-play (RTP), return-to-performance (RTPf), and postreturn career longevity outcomes after surgical labral repair are incompletely characterized. PURPOSE: To (1) describe RTP timing and rates after surgical labral repair, (2) quantify season-to-season changes in usage and performance versus matched controls, and (3) evaluate post-RTP career longevity. STUDY DESIGN:
Credibility Assessment
Preliminary — 38/100
Study Design
Rigor of the research methodology
5/20
Sample Size
Whether the study was sufficiently powered
7/20
Peer Review
Review status and journal reputation
10/20
Replication
Has this finding been independently reproduced?
6/20
Transparency
Funding disclosure and data availability
10/20
Overall
Sum of all five dimensions
38/100
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