Dr. Fabricant Trauma Research
Dr. Fabricant is an accomplished researcher, with over 300 peer-reviewed publications, 20 book chapters, and one textbook in circulation. He has received multiple institutional, national, and international awards for clinical research, including the Herodicus Award (AOSSM), the Excellence in Research Award (AOSSM), the Promising Career Award (PRiSM Society), and the Richard S. Laskin Young Attending Resident Teaching Award (HSS), among others. Dr. Fabricant currently serves on several research and education committees in two international professional societies (POSNA and PRiSM).
He is a member of several pediatric orthopedic and sports medicine research consortiums, through which he participates in cutting-edge multicenter clinical research studies with many of the most prolific researchers in pediatric and adolescent sports medicine. He is an active fellow of both the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) and the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP).
He also serves on the editorial board of Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research (CORR), on the Peer Review Committee for the Orthopaedic Research and education Foundation (OREF), and as a reviewer for several academic orthopaedic journals including the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery (JBJS), the American Journal of Sports Medicine (AJSM), Arthroscopy, and the Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics (JPO).
A full list of his research publications can be found here.
April 1, 2025
Dr. Peter Fabricant
Exploring Outcomes of Tibial Rigid Intramedullary Nailing in Adolescent Patients
This study demonstrated that RIMN for tibial shaft fractures in skeletally immature pediatric patients within 2 years of maturity was not associated with iatrogenic physeal injury and resultant changes in tibial slope. Additional favorable clinical outcomes, the potential for early weight-bearing, and few associated postoperative complications indicate that RIMN is
March 1, 2025
Dr. Peter Fabricant
No Association Between Growth Hormone Therapy and Upper Extremity Physeal Tension Injuries: A Matched Case-control Study
Using a matched case-control study design, the present study demonstrated no association between upper extremity physeal injury and growth hormone supplementation therapy in pediatric and adolescent patients. Considering these results, clinicians may not need to advise precaution against sports or other activities that put the upper extremity physes under stress
November 9, 2024
Dr. Peter Fabricant
Length of post-treatment immobilization following medial humeral epicondyle avulsion fracture predicts return of full range of motion
This large multicenter cohort study found that of the variables studied, increased immobilization time was the only independent predictor of residual elbow stiffness following medial epicondyle fractures in children, independent of treatment strategy and receiving PT/OT. With surgical treatment often warranting shorter post-treatment immobilization times, surgery may provide an avenue
February 7, 2024
Dr. Peter Fabricant
Strong Association Between Growth Hormone Therapy and Proximal Tibial Physeal Avulsion Fractures in Children and Adolescents: A Case-Control Study
This study demonstrates that the proportion of subjects who sustained proximal tibial physeal avulsion fractures and were receiving recombinant human growth hormone therapy at the time of injury was significantly greater than that of an age, sex, and body mass index-matched control group with midshaft tibial fractures (11% versus 0%,
May 30, 2023
Dr. Peter Fabricant
Extension of Tibial Spine Fractures Beyond the Tibial Spine: An MRI Analysis of 54 Patients
This study demonstrated that TSF beds were larger in younger patients, extended to the posterior third of the epiphysis in 54% of cases, and should be examined carefully for extension into weightbearing regions of the tibial plateau. In pediatric patients, the TSF often involves more of the tibial plateau than
January 21, 2022
Dr. Peter Fabricant
The Incidence of Pediatric Tibial Spine Fractures Is Greater and Peaks Later in Male Patients
This study confirms a difference in incidence by sex for pediatric tibial spine fractures, with male patients having a greater peak incidence that also occurs at an older age. Most cases in this study were treated nonoperatively.