| Literature DB >> 23339294 |
Marloes W J L Schmitz1, Vincent J J F Busch, Jean W M Gardeniers, Jan C M Hendriks, René P H Veth, B Willem Schreurs.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The number of total hip arthroplasties in patients under 30 years is increasing over the years. Almost all of them will face at least one or more future revisions in their life. Therefore, the implant used should have a high survival rate, and needs to be easily revisable resulting in a low re-revision rate. Several studies have evaluated the outcome of total hip arthroplasties in patients under 30 years. However, only a few reported on the follow-up outcome of 10 years or more. In addition, none of these reports published data of the subsequent revisions of these implants within their original report.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23339294 PMCID: PMC3599466 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-14-37
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Characteristics and survivorship of THA in patients 30 years or younger at time of operation with a mean follow-up of more than ten years in literature up to March 2011
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| Cage et al. [ | 29 | 17* | 18.4 (15–21) | 10.6 (8–15) | 1 revision at 11 yrs |
| Chmel et al. [ | 66 | 39 | 19.9 (11–29) | 15.1 (11–22) | 70% at 15 yrs (acetabular revision) |
| Sochart and Porter [ | 83 | 55 | 24.9 (17–29) | 20 (5–30) | 89% at 10 yrs ; 65% at 25 yrs |
| Torchia et al. [ | 63 | 50 | 17 (11–19) | 12.6 (1.6-18.6) | 27 revisions# |
| Witt et al. [ | 96 | 54 | 16.7 (11–27) | 11.5 (5–18) | 24 (25%) at average 9.5 years follow-up |
| Wroblewski et al. [ | 39 | 28 | 17.9 (12–19) | 12.6 (2.3 – 29.0) for non-revision | 16 revisions at mean 19.1 yrs (8–34) |
| (current study) | 69 | 48 | 24.6 (16–29) | 11.3 (2–23.4) | 86% at 10 yrs; 75% at 15 yrs |
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| Wangen et al. [ | 49 | 44 | 25 (15–30) | 13 (10–16) | 24 revisions of acetabular component# |
*mixed group of patients with total hip and total knee prosthesis.
#at mean follow-up.
Indication for total hip arthroplasty (n = 69)
| Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis | 18 |
| Osteonecrosis of femoral head | 21 |
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| Developmental dysplasia of the hip | 7 |
| Multiple epiphyseal dysplasia | 2 |
| Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease | 6 |
| Ankylosing spondylitis | 5 |
| Morquio’s disease | 2 |
| Ankylosis of unknown origin | 2 |
| Polycystic disease of the femoral head of unknown origin | 2 |
| Arthritis and osteomyelitits | 2 |
| Posttraumatic osteoarthritis | 1 |
| Psoriatic arthritis | 1 |
Types of implant
| Müller®/Allopro® cup | 14 | M.E. Müller® straight stem | 11 |
| Elite™ Plus LPW | 26 | Charnley Elite (Plus) stem™ | 13 |
| Exeter/Contemporary™ | 29 | Exeter Stem™ | 45 |
Figure 1In 29 of the 69 cases, a pre-operative bone stock deficiency on the acetabular side was present, which was classified according to the AAOS classification and treated with a cemented THA and IBG.
Figure 2Acetabular reconstruction in a 27-year-old woman with secondary osteoarthritis due to congenital hip dysplasia. Preoperative (A), immediately postoperative (B), and 12 years postoperative (C).
Complications of the 69 primary total hip arthroplasties, excluding the 13 revisions
| Early reoperation due to suspicion of deep infection | 1 | Fully recovered |
| Dislocation | 2 | One successful closed reduction, however one dislocation in a multi trauma patient needed surgical reduction |
| Neurological deficit | 1 | Femoral nerve exploration → incomplete recovery |
| Periprosthetic Fracture Vancouver B1 | 1 | Plate osteosynthesis with cable grip plate system. No revision of the implant |
Radiographic characteristics of 56 primary total hip arthroplasty patients that were not revised at last follow-up
| Acetabular radiolucent lines | 18 |
| Osteolysis | 9 |
| Socket migration | - |
| Progressive tilting of the cup | - |
| PAO’s | 13 |
| Polyethelyne wear > 2 mm | 3 |
| Femoral radiolucent lines | 3 |
| Rounding off of the calcar | 8 |
| Cortical atrophy | 2 |
| Cortical hypertrophy | 5 |
| Osteolysis of femoral component | 7 |
Note: multiple radiographic characteristics per patient are possible.
The 10-year and 15-years survivorship with the 95% confidence intervals (CI) for the three endpoints (revision for any reason, revision for aseptic loosening, radiographic failure) of the 69 hips including 29 total hip arthroplasties with impaction bone grafting (IBG) and 40 primary cemented total hip arthroplasties
| All hips (n = 69) | 86% (74 to 92) | 75% (59 to 86) | 90% (79 to 96) | 82% (65 to 92) | 90% (80 to 96) | 82% (65 to 92) |
| Primary cemented hips (n = 40) | 81% (64 to 91) | 71% (50 to 84) | 86% (70 to 94) | 80% (60 to 91) | 86% (70 to 94) | 80% (60 to 91) |
| Acetabular IBG (n = 29) | 93% (74 to 98) | 83% (49 to 95) | 96% (77 to 99) | 86% (48 to 97) | 96% (77 to 99) | 86% (48 to 97) |
Figure 3Kaplan Meier estimated survival of the total of sixty-nine hips regarding endpoint revision for aseptic loosening.