AI Article Synopsis

  • A study was conducted on ceramic-on-metal hip replacements originally performed from 2007 to 2009 to assess their long-term outcomes after 5.8 and 10.1 years.
  • The revision rates increased from 3.1% at six years to 8.8% at ten years, with a notable rise in pain scores and decline in overall hip function during that time.
  • The findings revealed significant issues like increased radiolucent lines in X-rays and higher metal ion levels, indicating that the survival rate for these implants dropped to 91.2%, below the recommended threshold, raising concerns for future implant designs.

Article Abstract

Aims: In 2015, we published the results of our ceramic-on-metal (CoM) total hip arthroplasties (THAs) performed between October 2007 and July 2009 with a mean follow-up of 34 months (23 to 45) and a revision rate of 3.1%. The aim of this paper is to present the longer-term outcomes.

Methods: A total of 264 patients were reviewed at a mean of 5.8 years (4.6 to 7.2) and 10.1 years (9.2 to 10.6) to determine revision rate, pain, outcome scores, radiological analysis, and blood ion levels. Those who were unwilling or unable to travel were contacted by telephone.

Results: The all-cause revision rate at six years was 3.1% (eight THAs), increasing to 8.8% (18 THAs) at ten years. Of these, there were four and then seven bearing-related revisions at six and ten years, respectively. There was a statistically significant deterioration in the visual analogue scale pain score and Oxford Hip Score (OHS) between six and ten years. There were 18 CoM THAs in 17 patients who had a cobalt or chromium level over 4 ppb and ten CoM THAs in nine patients who had a cobalt or chromium level higher than 7 ppb with a statistically significant increase in chromium levels only between the two timepoints. Overall, 84 stems (39.1%) had significant radiolucent lines at ten years compared to 65 (25.5%) at six years.

Conclusion: When compared to the original review, there has been a significant deterioration in pain score, OHS, radiograph appearance, and, most critically, survival has fallen to 91.2%, which does not meet the Orthopaedic Data Evaluation Panel (ODEP) 10 A* 95% threshold. Although this bearing is no longer on the market, 2.5% were bearing-related revisions, which have relevance to the discussion around modular dual-mobility implants that have a similar metal interface.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11534456PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1302/2633-1462.511.BJO-2024-0087.R1DOI Listing

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