| Literature DB >> 22533938 |
Heather K Vincent1, Marybeth Horodyski, Peter Gearen, Richard Vlasak, Amanda N Seay, Bryan P Conrad, Kevin R Vincent.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Obesity rates continue to rise and more total hip arthroplasty procedures are being performed in progressively younger, obese patients. Hence, maintenance of long term physical function will become very important for quality of life, functional independence and hip prosthesis survival. Presently, there are no reviews of the long term efficacy of total hip arthroplasty on physical function. This review: 1) synopsized available data regarding obesity effects on long term functional outcomes after total hip arthroplasty, and 2) suggested future directions for research.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22533938 PMCID: PMC3489615 DOI: 10.1186/1749-799X-7-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Surg Res ISSN: 1749-799X Impact factor: 2.359
Retrospective studies of functional outcomes in obese and non-obese patients with total hip arthroplasty (THA)
| Study | N Follow-up | Sample | Surgical Type & Components | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Braeken et al [ | 193 to 1 year; Retrospective Mean age 63.5 years | 61% were women BMI was found for each patient | Surgical components not described; surgical type not described: data obtained from medical charts and mailings | While high BMI was related to high postoperative pain levels, BMI itself was not a strong contributor to the regression model for WOMAC functional score (parameter estimate value of 0.092). |
| Haverkamp et al [ | 411 Mean out to 20 years; Retrospective | 69% were women; BMI groups were <25, ≥ 25 and >30 kg/m2 Mean ages were 64–66 years among groups | Anterolateral approach; Weber rotation THA System (Allopro) with cement; | HHS scores were progressively lower for higher BMI brackets at maximum follow-up time (91.6, 86.8 and 83.7 points; p = 0.02); revision rates were similar among BMI complication rates and groups |
| LeDuff et al [ | 770 2–10 years; Retrospective | 17% were women BMI groups were < or ≥ 30 kg/m2 Mean age 49 years | Posterior approach; 30-37% of metaphyseal stem femoral components were cemented; Conserve Plus hip resurfacing prostheses were used | By 6.2 years of follow-up, UCLA scores for function and activity werelower in the obese patients than non-obese patients by ~8%; SF-12 physical component scores were also lower in the obese group (49.3 vs 51.4 points; p = 0.013); 5 year survivorship was 90.6% and 98.6% in patients with BMI <25 and 30 kg/m2, respectively. |
| McLaughlin & Lee [ | 285 10–18 years; Retrospective | 51% were women; BMI groups were <30 or ≥30 kg/m2 Mean ages 54–57 years | Uncemented T-tap acetabular components (Biomet Inc.) and Taperloc femoral points in obese patients and from 53 to components were used by one surgeon; all were posterolateral approaches | By follow-up HHS ↑ from 52 to 89 89 points in non-obese patients, with no difference between groups; no differences in revision rates or complications occurred between groups |
| Yeung et al [ | 2,026 6.3 year mean follow-up; Retrospective | 53% were female; BMI groups were <30 or ≥30 kg/m2 | Cementless procedures used; components and approached were not described | HHS scores were lower for the obese compared to the non-obese patients at follow-up (89.9 vs 93.2 points; p < 0.001); HHS scores for function, activities, hip range of motion were lower in the obese group (all p < 0.05); survival rates were for the implants were similar at year 11 (95-96%) |
THA = total hip arthroplasty; BMI = body mass index; EUROHIP = European Collaborative Database of Cost and Practice Patterns of Total Hip Replacement.
OR = odds ratio; RR = relative risk; HHS = Harris Hip Score; UCLA = University of California and Los Angeles (UCLA) activity scale; Medical Outcomes SF-12 = Short Form 12; WOMAC = Western Ontario and McMaster Osteoarthritis Index; VAS = visual analogue scale.
NS = not specified.
Prospective studies of functional outcomes in obese and non-obese patients with total hip arthroplasty (THA)
| Study | N Follow-up | Sample | Surgical Type & Components | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aderinto et al [ | 140 3 years; Prospective Follow-up | 61% were women; groups were <30 or ≥30 kg/m2 | Cemented prostheses; approaches or components were not described | At year 3, HHS scores ↑ from 44 to 90 points (non-obese) and from 42.5 to 85 points (obese), with no difference between groups; lower scores for stairs, sitting and putting on shoes-socks and range of motion were lower in the obese patients (p < 0.05). |
| Andrew et al [ | 1,421 5 years; Multi- center Prospective | 62% were women; BMI groups were <30, 30- < 40 and ≥40 kg/m2 Mean ages were 69.1, 65.5 and 60.6 years | Anterolateral or posterior approaches were used; cemented Stryker Exeter femoral components and several different acetabular components | By year 5, OHS scores were best in the non-obese group and worst in the obese group (19.6 vs 25.6 points; p = 0.005), but no differences in the 5 year change in OHS scores existed. No differences in rates of revision, dislocations or medical complications existed. |
| Busato et al [ | 18,968 15 years; Multi- center prospective | sexes NS; BMI groups were <25, 25- <30 and ≥ 30 kg/m2 | Surgical components not described; surgical type not described; Data were obtained from the Total Hip Registry (Switzerland) | High preoperative BMI was related with a dose-effect response with shorter unsupported walking time less normal stair climb, and shoe tying during the 15 year follow-up, despitesimilar pain relief across BMI brackets. |
| Chan and Villar [ | 166 to 3 years; Prospective cohort | 59% were women BMI groups were <25, 25–29.9, 30–39.9, >40 kg/m2 Mean ages were 71.4, 69.0 and 68.1 years | Surgical components not described; surgical type not described | HHS scores were superimposed onto the Rosser Index Matrix (which ranks disability status); there were no differences in Rosser scores for disability among the BMI groups by year 3. |
| Chee et al [ | 108 5 years; Prospective cohort | 41% were women; BMI groups were <35 kg/m2 or >35 (1 comorbidity) and >40 kg/m2 | Anterolateral approach was used on all patients; 25.5% Charnley prosthesis (dePuy, Int.), 74.5% Lubinus SPII prosthesis (Waldmar-Link GmbH); cemented | Five year HHS were higher in non-obese than morbidly obese patients (91.8 vs 85.4 points; p < 0.0001) despite similar pre- operative scores; SF-36 subscores for physical functioning were lower in morbidly obese patients at year 5. |
| Dowsey et al [ | 471 1 year; Prospective follow-up | 60% were women; BMI groups were <30, 30–39 and ≥ 40.0 kg/m2 | Surgical procedures not described; surgical components not described; cement used varied across groups | Morbidly obese patients had a lower change in HHS function scores than obese and non-obese patients, respectively by year 1(11.5 vs 15.6 and 16.2 points, respectively); HHS were lowest in morbidly obese patients by year 1 (70.5 vs 79.8 and 80.8 points p = 0.03). |
| Gandhi et al [ | 707 hips I year Prospective cohort | 59-66% were women; waist circumference was assessed for metabolic syndrome BMI ranged from 22.0 to 36.6 kg/m2 64.8-66.2 years | Surgical components or procedures not described; patients were obtained from a registry | 1 year WOMAC scores (pain, function) were highest in patients with 4 metabolic syndrome factors compared to those with fewer factors; regression B coefficients showed that obesity predicted 1 year WOMAC scores (B = 2.4 1.4-4.2; 95% CI). |
| Jackson et al [ | 2,026 mean of 5 years; Prospective cohort | 77% were women; BMI groups were Mean ages were 68 and 63 years | Posterior surgical approach; ABG2 Stryker cementless femoral and acetabular components | HHS were lower in obese vs non-obese patients at follow-up (89.9 vs 93.2 points); HHS functional scores were also lower in the obese group (29.6 vs 31.0 points); hip flexion, adduction and internal rotation ranges were less in the obese vs non-obese patients. HHS pain scores were not different between groups. |
| Judge et al [ | 1,327 1 year EUROHIP Study of 20 orthopedic centers | 56% were women; BMI groups were <30, 30–39 and ≥40 kg/m2 Ages <50 to ≥ 70 years | Surgical components not described; surgical type not described | Median WOMAC scores were highest in the morbidly obese group pre-THR, (68.1 vs 61.5 and 57.6 points). but the 1 year change in WOMAC score was highest in the morbidly obese group (median score change of 56.1 vs 33.3 and 37.5 points); morbidly obese patients showed a ↑ OR of “returning to normal” (functionality) than the other groups. |
| Lubbeke et al [ | 435 5-year; Prospective cohort | 53-55% are women; BMI groups were < or ≥ 30 kg/m2 Mean ages were 68 72 years | 85% of patients had mixed components (1 cemented,1 non) | Obesity was related with worse outcomes after revision than primary THA by year 5 (lower HHS scores: 76.7 vs 88.1 points; lower WOMAC function scores 61.6 vs 70.0 points). BMI was related to the mean difference of HHS scores for primary and revision THA (R coefficient = −1.0 [−0.1 to −1.95% CI]). |
| Lubbeke et al [ | 2,495 5-year; Prospective cohort | 48.7-57.5% women; 8.5-9% were revisions; BMI groups were < or ≥ 30 kg/m2 Mean age 69 years | 95% were lateral THA approach, 86% used Morscher press-fit uncemented actetabular component and Muller straight stem cobalt chromium femoral component | BMI of ≥30 kg/m2 was related with a RR of 3.7-4.0 for revisions, 9.1-12.5 for dislocations and1.9-8.0 for infections in obese compared to non-obese men and women. By year 5, HHS were 87.8 and 79.6 points in non- obese and obese women and 90.5 vs 87.4 points in non-obese and obese men; WOMAC function scores were 14.7% and 8.0% lower in obese women and men thantheir non-obese counterparts. |
| Lubbeke et al [ | 204 5-year; Prospective cohort | 50-7.9% were women; BMI groups were < or ≥ 30 kg/m2 Age range <50 to ≥80 years | Cemented acetabular cups were used in 67% and 80% of obese and non-obese patients | HHS were 82.8 ± 14.7 and 71.4 ± 17.0 points in the non-obese and obese patients by year 5. Surgical revisions were performed at 92 and 125 months in obese and non-obese groups, respectively. The adjusted hazard ratio for occurrence of infection, dislocation or re-revision increased from 1.0 (BMI < 25) to 1.5 (BMI 25–29.9) to 4.5 (BMI 30–34.9) to 10.9 (BMI ≥35.0). |
| Lubbeke et al [ | 503 5 or 10 years; Prospective follow-up | 58% were women; BMI groups were <25, 25–29.9 and ≥ 30 kg/m2 | Hybrid prosthesis; Morscher press fit uncemented cup and cemented cobalt-chromium stem (Zimmer); alumnia ceramic head, and a ceramic- polyethylene surface | At year 5, HHS ↓ with each rogressively higher BMI group (91.4, 88.4 and 85.1 points; p = 0.019). At year 10, HHS tended to be lower in patients with BMI ≥30 kg/m2 compared with those with BMI <25 and 25–29.9 kg/m2 (83.6 vs 87.3 and 87.1 points; p = 0.08); more obese patients had low UCLA scores and more non-obese patients had higher UCLA scores. |
| Moran et al [ | 800 6–18 mo; Prospective follow-up | 61% women; BMI groups were <25, 25–29.9, 30–39.9 ≥40 kg/m2 Mean age was 68 years | All were anterolateral approach surgeries; components were not described | For every 1 point increase in BMI, HHS scores dropped by 0.25 by month 6 and by 0.35 by month 18 post-surgery. No BMI effect on early failure of THA was found. |
| Naylor et al [ | 198 1 year; Prospective observational | 56% were women; BMI groups were <30 or ≥30 kg/m2 Mean age 67 years | Surgical components not described; approaches not described | Obese patients had smaller increases in timed mobility than non-obese patients (0.23 m/s slower on 15 m walk time) and the timed up and go test (3.1 sec slower) at year 1; WOMAC scores for function and pain were worse in obese than non-obese patients by year 1. |
| Singh et al [ | 2,687 2–5 years; Prospective cohort of revision THA | 53-54% were women; BMI brackets were <25, 25–29.9, 30–39.9 ≥40 kg/m2 Mean 5 year age was 65 years | Surgical components not described; approaches not described | At year 2, the OR for complete dependence onwalking/gait aids was 2.0 (vs 0.9 for BMI 25–29.9); moderate to severe activity limitation was predicted by high BMI. The OR of reporting difficulty in 3 of 7 mobility and functional tasks ↑ from 1.2 to 2.7 with increased BMI from 25–29.9 to 40 kg/m2, by year five, the OR increased to 1.3 and 3.0 in these same BMI brackets (all p < 0.01). |
| Søballe et al (1987) [ | 125 5 years; Prospective follow-up | A weight index was calculated as < or > 120% of pre-surgical weight; analyses were also performed using weight brackets of < or > 80 kg; Mean age at follow-up 70 (28–89) years | All were posterolateral approach surgeries; Lubinus prostheses were used and fixed with gentamicin impregnated radiopaque PMMA; One surgeon performed all hip replacements | Walking ability, defined using the Charnley scoring system was lower in patients with a weight index >120 pre-surgery, but similar to patients with indexes <120 by year 5 (4.9 vs 5.0 points; p = NSig). |
| Stickles et al [ | 5921 year; Prospective follow-up | 56% were women; BMI brackets were <25, 25–29.9, 30–40 >40 kg/m2 Mean age 69 years | Surgical components or procedures not described; patients were obtained from a registry | By year 1, stair ascension and descension difficulty was reported in 86-88% of very obese patients compared with 46-55% of non-obese patients; BMI did not correlate with change in WOMAC scores (31.8 and 35.9 points, in non-obese and very obese patients, respectively; p > 0.05). |
THA = total hip arthroplasty; BMI = body mass index; EUROHIP = European Collaborative Database of Cost and Practice Patterns of Total Hip Replacement.
OR = odds ratio; RR = relative risk; HHS = Harris Hip Score; UCLA = University of California and Los Angeles (UCLA) activity scale; Medical Outcomes SF-12 = Short Form 12; WOMAC = Western Ontario and McMaster Osteoarthritis Index; VAS = visual analogue scale.
NSig = non-significant.