| Literature DB >> 31412841 |
Fu-Shine Yang1, Yu-Der Lu1, Cheng-Ta Wu1, Kier Blevins2, Mel S Lee1, Feng-Chih Kuo3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This study aimed to investigate the risk factors for mechanical failure of cement spacers and the impact on hip function after two-stage exchange arthroplasty for periprosthetic joint infection (PJI).Entities:
Keywords: Articulating spacer; Complications; Hip; PMMA; Periprosthetic joint infection
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31412841 PMCID: PMC6694660 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-019-2759-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Fig. 1Flowchart of eligible patients
Fig. 2Images showing: a) the femoral and b) the cup part of a PMMA articulating spacer
Demographic data of patients in the spacer-complication group (group A) and the no-spacer-complication group (group B)
| Characteristics | Overall ( | Group A ( | Group B ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, median (IQR), y | 56 | (50 to 71) | 55 | (41 to 59) | 64 | (52 to 77) | 0.021 |
| Male, | 19 | (61.3) | 10 | (71.4) | 9 | (52.9) | 0.290 |
| BMI, median (IQR), kg/m2 | 23.7 | (22.1 to 27.7) | 23.5 | (21.9 to 29.4) | 23.8 | (22.6 to 25.7) | 0.787 |
| ASA class, | 0.436 | ||||||
| 2 | 11 | (35.5) | 6 | (42.9) | 5 | (29.4) | |
| 3 | 20 | (64.5) | 8 | (57.1) | 12 | (70.6) | |
| Prosthesis type, | 0.895 | ||||||
| Bipolar | 8 | (25.8) | 3 | (21.4) | 5 | (29.4) | |
| Primary | 11 | (35.5) | 4 | (28.6) | 7 | (41.2) | |
| Revision | 12 | (38.7) | 7 | (50.0) | 5 | (29.4) | |
| Comorbidities, | |||||||
| Diabetes mellitus | 9 | (29.0) | 4 | (28.6) | 5 | (29.4) | 0.959 |
| Renal disease | 3 | (9.7) | 2 | (14.3) | 1 | (5.9) | 0.431 |
| Liver disease | 6 | (19.4) | 2 | (14.3) | 4 | (23.5) | 0.517 |
| Drug abuse | 3 | (9.7) | 2 | (14.3) | 1 | (5.9) | 0.431 |
| Alcoholism | 3 | (9.7) | 2 | (14.3) | 1 | (5.9) | 0.835 |
| Psychiatric disorder | 2 | (6.5) | 2 | (14.3) | 0 | (0) | 0.107 |
| Classification of PJI, n (%) | 0.003 | ||||||
| Acute | 10 | (32.3) | 1 | (7.1) | 9 | (52.9) | |
| Chronic | 21 | (67.7) | 13 | (92.9) | 8 | (47.1) | |
| 1st stage | |||||||
| Pre-op ESR, median (IQR), mm/hr | 63 | (30 to 91) | 62 | (28 to 96) | 63 | (30 to 76) | 0.889 |
| Pre-op CRP, median (IQR), mg/dL | 15 | (6.3 to 73.0) | 29 | (9.2–95) | 14.8 | (5.9 to 55.7) | 0.578 |
| Approach, n (%) | 0.031 | ||||||
| Posterior | 23 | (74.2) | 13 | (92.9) | 10 | (58.8) | |
| Direct lateral | 8 | (25.8) | 1 | (7.1) | 7 | (41.2) | |
| Paprosky bone defect classification, n (%) | |||||||
| Acetabulum | 0.143 | ||||||
| I | 14 | (45.2) | 5 | (35.7) | 9 | (52.9) | |
| II (A + B + C) | 8 | (25.8) | 6 | (42.9) | 2 | (11.8) | |
| III (A + B) | 9 | (29.0) | 3 | (21.4) | 6 | (5.3) | |
| Femur | 0.977 | ||||||
| I | 8 | (25.8) | 4 | (28.6) | 4 | (23.5) | |
| II | 10 | (32.3) | 4 | (28.6) | 6 | (35.3) | |
| III (A + B) | 11 | (35.5) | 5 | (35.7) | 6 | (35.3) | |
| IV | 2 | (6.4) | 1 | (7.1) | 1 | (5.9) | |
| Additional spacer exchange | 13 | (41.9) | 6 | (42.9) | 7 | (41.2) | 0.953 |
| Recurrent infection | 10 | 3 | 7 | ||||
| Interim perioda, median (IQR), weeks | 14.5 | (11 to 32) | 15 | (10 to 20) | 13.5 | (11 to 27) | 0.950 |
| Reimplantationa | |||||||
| Pre-op ESR, median (IQR), mm/hr | 29.9 | (11.5 to 47.0) | 31.2 | (14.5 to 46.0) | 28.8 | (8.3 to 55.5) | 0.397 |
| Pre-op CRP, median (IQR), mg/dL | 16.7 | (1.32 to 5.5) | 28.7 | (1.83 to 6.1) | 6.9 | (1.0 to 5.7) | 0.156 |
| Follow-up perioda, median (IQR), months | 29 | (23 to 35.5) | 29 | (25 to 34) | 30 | (23 to 36) | 0.948 |
aOne patient in group A and one patient in group B had permanent spacer implantation without revision surgery and were excluded from calculation of the interim period, CRP/ESR before reimplantation, and duration of follow-up period
IQR interquartile range, BMI body mass index, ASA American Society of Anesthesiologists, ESR erythrocyte sedimentation rate, CRP C-reactive protein, PJI periprosthetic joint infection
Fig. 3Hip radiographs showing: a) post-operative X-ray after implantation of a PMMA articulating spacer; b) dislocation of the PMMA articulating spacer 3 months later after implantation; and c) a well-fixed cementless total hip arthroplasty 2 years following reimplantation
Microbiologic laboratory data for specimens isolated during resection arthroplasty
| Pathogens, | ||
|---|---|---|
| Coagulase-negative | 8 | (25.8) |
|
| 6 | (19.4) |
| Methicillin-resistant | 2 | (6.5) |
|
| 1 | (3.2) |
|
| 1 | (3.2) |
|
| 1 | (3.2) |
| Polymicrobial | 5 | (16.1) |
| Culture-negative | 7 | (22.6) |
Stepwise binary logistic regression between patients with spacer complications and those without
| Odds ratio | 95% CI | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (y) | 0.91 | 0.83–1.00 | 0.045 |
| Chronic infection | 14.7 | 1.19–182 | 0.036 |
CI confidence interval
Fig. 4Kaplan-Meier survival curve analysis of patients in whom treatment was successful in the spacer-related-complication group versus the no-spacer-complication group
Fig. 5Box-and-whisker plots of preoperative and postoperative hip scores in the two groups
Literature regarding hip-spacer complications
| Study | No. of patients | Spacer type | Spacer mechanical complications | Overall | Outcome after reimplantation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duncan et al. (1993) [ | 13 | PROSTALAC | 3 dislocations | 23% | 1 allograft nonunion (8%) 1 loose Lord ring (8%) 2 heterotopic bones (15%) |
| Ivarsson et al. (1994) [ | 5 | Hand-made | 1 dislocation 1 subtrochanteric fracture | 40% | – |
| Leunig et al. (1998) [ | 12 | Hand-made | 5 dislocations 1 spacer fracture | 50% | – |
| Younger et al.(1998) [ | 29 (30 spacers) | PROSTALAC | 3 dislocations | 10% | 1 extrusion of cement into knee (3%) 1 recurrent infection (3%) 2 recurrent dislocations (7%) 2 allograft nonunions (7%) 1 loose Lord ring (3%) 3 prosthesis migrations (10%) |
| Magnan et al. (2001) [ | 10 | Mold | 1 dislocation | 10% | – |
| Koo et al. (2001) [ | 22 | Mold | 1 femur iatrogenic fracture | 5% | 1 recurrent infection (5%) 2 peroneal nerve palsies (9%) 1 greater trochanteric non-union (5%) 3 heterotopic ossifications (14%) |
| Durbhakula et al. (2004) [ | 20 | Mold | 2 dislocations 2 spacer fractures | 20% | – |
| Hsieh et al. (2004) [ | 58 | Mold | 2 dislocations 2 spacer fractures | 7% | 2 recurrent infections (3%) 1 dislocation (2%) |
| Jung et al. (2009) [ | 82 (88 spacers) | Mold | 15 spacer dislocations 9 spacer fractures 12 femoral fractures | 40.9% | 16 dislocations (23%) |
| Faschingbauer et al. (2015) [ | 138 | 93 mold 45 hand-made | 12 dislocations 12 spacer fractures 1 femoral fracture 1 spacer fracture-dislocation 1 spacer protrusion into pelvis | 19.5% | – |
| This study | 35 | Mold | 6 dislocations 3 spacer fractures 1 spacer fracture-dislocation 4 femoral fractures | 40% | 3 recurrent infections 1 dislocation 1 greater trochanteric non-union |