| Literature DB >> 23054526 |
John H Healey1, Carol D Morris, Edward A Athanasian, Patrick J Boland.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Compliant, self-adjusting compression technology is a novel approach for durable prosthetic fixation of the knee. However, the long-term survival of these constructs is unknown. QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: We therefore determined the survival of the Compress prosthesis (Biomet Inc, Warsaw, IN, USA) at 5 and 10 actuarial years and identified the failure modes for this form of prosthetic fixation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23054526 PMCID: PMC3563794 DOI: 10.1007/s11999-012-2635-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Orthop Relat Res ISSN: 0009-921X Impact factor: 4.176
Contraindications for use of the Compress® device for knee arthroplasty
| Cortical thickness of less than 2.5 mm |
| Pre- or postoperative bone irradiation, precluding osteointegration |
| Extraarticular resection of knee (an articulated implant, such as the Burstein-Lane® implant, would be indicated) |
| Inadequate or unreconstructable soft tissue envelope (a very low-profile implant, such as the GUEPAR® implant, would be indicated) |
| Metastatic disease that mandates immediate weightbearing (precludes the requisite 3 months of protected weightbearing) |
| Inability to cooperate with the postoperative program of early, protected weightbearing |
Patient demographic and clinical characteristics
| Characteristic | Value |
|---|---|
| Number of patients | 82 |
| Age (years)* | 20.4 (14–63) |
| Sex (number of patients) | |
| Male | 40 |
| Female | 42 |
| Reconstruction surgery (number of patients) | |
| Primary | 64 |
| Revision | 18 |
| Tumor diagnosis (number of patients) | |
| High-grade osteogenic sarcoma | 64 |
| Chondrosarcoma | 5 |
| Malignant fibrohistiocytoma | 5 |
| Giant cell tumor | 3 |
| Low-grade osteogenic sarcoma | 2 |
| Other tumor | 1 |
| No tumor (arthroplasty revision) | 2 |
* The value is expressed as the median, with range in parentheses.
Fig. 1A–B(A) A diagram illustrates the outrigger that aligns the external drill guide with the intramedullary anchor plug. (B) A diagram demonstrates how the drill bits (through the outer two holes) and ultimately the fixation pins (through the central three holes) align. Reprinted with permission of Biomet Inc from Compress® Compliant Pre-Stress Device Orthopaedic Salvage System: surgical technique. Available at: http://www.biomet.com/orthopedics/getfile.cfm?id=1711&rt=inline. ©2012 Biomet Inc.
Fig. 2A–BThe Compress® is ideally suited for situations where there is a short remaining intramedullary canal that can only accommodate a short stem and fixation would be compromised. (A) An image shows the femur of a 15-year-old patient who had resection of a 25-cm osteogenic sarcoma of the distal femur that extended into the proximal 1/3 of the diaphysis and required a 28-cm resection. (B) A radiograph demonstrates how the surrounding bone responds to the compliant force over time.
Fig. 3The Kaplan-Meier survival analysis of the Compress® prosthesis shows implant survivorship is 85% at 5 years (dashed line) and 80% at 10 years (dotted line).
Fig. 4The flowchart shows the failure modes, treatment, and outcomes of the 13 patients who experienced bone and/or device failure after Compress® implantation. ORIF = open reduction and internal fixation.
Fig. 5A–CType I failure is a combination of interface and bone failure. At (A) 3 and (B) 6 months, the bone has not integrated at the prosthetic interface, and (C) at 10 months, it has fractured between the spindle and the anchor plug (arrow). Notably, the sleeve and tension bar acted like an inadequate stem and the traction bar broke.
Fig. 6A–BType IIA failures are fractures proximal to the anchor plug fixation, perhaps at a stress transition point or, as in (A) this case where the bone was thin due to endosteal erosion from a failed prior stemmed implant (arrow). (B) The followup radiograph shows the fracture healed with a dynamic hip screw fixation and onlay allograft struts.
Fig. 7A–B(A, B) Lateral radiographs taken 3 months apart show a Type IIB failure. (A) The black arrow points to the fracture of the posterior cortical segment that has moved with the spindle and the megaprosthesis, and the white arrow points to the intact bone-spindle interface where there has been some bone hypertrophy. Notably, the anterior cortex has not integrated and there is no hypertrophy. (B) The fracture healed spontaneously.
Fig. 8A–CType IIB failure shows (A) atrophy radiographically and (B, C) osteonecrosis histologically in two patient samples (Stain, hematoxylin and eosin; original magnification, ×40).
Summary of peer-reviewed literature reporting megaprosthesis survivorship
| Study | Year | Number of patients | Site | Prosthesis* | Implant survival (%) | Followup (years) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unwin et al. [ | 1993 | 218 | Distal femur | Stanmore | 65 | 10 |
| Langlais et al. [ | 2006 | 26 | Distal femur | GUEPAR® II or custom press-fit cemented | 92 | 12.5 |
| Myers et al. [ | 2007 | 332 | Distal femur | Stanmore | 67 | 10 |
| Zimel et al. [ | 2009 | 47 | Distal femur | Howmedica 39 OSS™ 8 | 36 | 10 |
| Farfalli et al. [ | 2009 | 50 | Distal femur | OSS™ uncemented | 71 | 10 |
| Shehadeh et al. [ | 2010 | 101 | Distal femur | MSRS™ | 70 | 10 |
| Bergin et al. [ | 2012 | 93 | Distal femur | MRS™/GMRS™ | 73 | 10 |
| Tan et al. [ | 2012 | 78 | Distal femur | Custom | 71 | 10 |
| Roberts et al. [ | 1991 | 135 | Distal femur | Stanmore | 72 | 5 |
| Horowitz et al. [ | 1993 | 61 | Distal femur | Burstein-Lane® | 78 | 5 |
| Kawai et al. [ | 1999 | 25 | Distal femur | Finn® | 88 | 5 |
| Griffin et al. [ | 2005 | 74 | Distal femur | KMFTR™ uncemented | 70 | 14 |
| Bruns et al. [ | 2007 | 13 | Distal femur | MUTARS® | 87 | 7 |
| Kinkel et al. [ | 2010 | 49 | Distal femur | MUTARS® | 57 | 5 |
| Matsumine et al. [ | 2011 | 69 | Distal femur | Kyocera | 85 | 5 |
| Ritschl et al. [ | 1992 | 206 | Mixed | KMFTR™ | 73 | 10 |
| Unwin et al. [ | 1993 | 218 | Mixed | Stanmore | 65 | 10 |
| Unwin et al. [ | 1996 | 1001 | Mixed | Stanmore | 67.4 | 10 |
| Mascard et al. [ | 1998 | 90 | Mixed | GUEPAR® | 60 | 10 |
| Mittermayer et al. [ | 2001 | 41 | Mixed | KMFTR™ | 53 | 11 |
| Plötz et al. [ | 2002 | 64 | Mixed | Custom | 25 | 10 |
| Bickels et al. [ | 2002 | 110 | Mixed | MSRS™ | 88 | 10 |
| Biau et al. [ | 2006 | 56 | Mixed | Custom | 50 | 11 |
| Morgan et al. [ | 2006 | 105 | Mixed | HMRS™ | 59 | 10 |
| Current study | 2012 | 82 | Distal femur | Compress® | 80 | 10 |
* Prostheses include Stanmore (Stanmore Implants Worldwide Ltd, Elstree, UK); GUEPAR® II (Stryker France, Lyon, France); OSS™ = Orthopaedic Salvage System (Biomet Inc, Warsaw, IN, USA); MSRS™ = Modular Segmental Reconstruction System (Stryker Howmedica, Mahwah, NJ, USA); MRS™/GMRS™ = Modular Replacement System/Global Modular Replacement System stems (Stryker Howmedica); Burstein-Lane® implant (Biomet Inc, Warsaw, IN, USA); Finn® (Biomet Inc); KMFTR™ = Kotz Modular Femur Tibia Reconstruction System (Howmedica, Rutherford, NJ, USA); MUTARS® = Modular Universal Tumour And Revision System (Implantcast GmbH, Buxtehude, Germany); Kyocera (Kyocera Medical Corp, Osaka, Japan); HMRS™ = Howmedica Modular Replacement System (Howmedica); †patients in this study were also included in the analysis by Shehadeh et al. [27].