Classifications of AAFD/PCFD have evolved with an increased understanding of the pathology involved. A review of classification systems helps identify deficiencies and respective contributions to the evolution in understanding the classification of AAFD.
Using multiple electronic database searches (Medline, PubMed) and Google search, original papers classifying AAFD were identified. Nine original articles were identified that met the inclusion criteria.
Johnson's original classification and multiple variants provided a significant leap in understanding and communicating the pathology but remained tibialis posterior tendon focussed. Drawbacks of these classifications include the implication of causality, linearity of progression through stages, an over-simplification of stage 2 deformity and a failure to understand multiple tendons react, not just tibialis posterior. Later classifications, such as the PCFD classification, are deformity-centric. Early instability in non-cavus feet and all stages of cavus feet can present pain and instability with minor/no deformity. These may not be captured in deformity-based classifications biased to planus feet.' The authors developed the 'Triple Classification' (TC) understanding that primary pathology is a progressive ligament failure/instability that presents as tendon reactivity, deformity, and painful impingement. There is a variable manifestation dependent on starting foot morphology.
This review has identified deficiencies within classification systems used in AAFD/PCFD and, as a result, was used to help develop a more comprehensive 'Triple classification'. Advantages of the TC include representing foot types with no deformity, defining complex secondary instabilities, delinking of foot types, tendon reactivity/ligament instability and deformity to represent these independently in a more comprehensive classification system.