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WHOLE BLOOD METAL ION LEVELS AFTER TOTAL HIP REPLACEMENT: A COMPARISON OF CERAMIC-ON-METAL AND METAL-ON-METAL BEARINGS



Abstract

The combination of a ceramic head articulating against a metal acetabular liner (CoM) has shown reduced metal ion levels compared with a metal-on-metal bearing (MoM) in hip simulator studies. A randomized prospective clinical trial was undertaken using CoM and MoM bearings in an otherwise identical total hip procedure. The initial clinical results were encouraging. This report comprises a further review of metal ion data.

Patients received identical components with the exception of the bearing surface material but all were 28mm diameter. All components were supplied by DePuy International Ltd. Patients were assessed pre-operatively, 3m, 12m and > 24m (median 32m). Whole blood samples were collected at regular follow-ups, frozen and analysed in batches using high resolution Inductively Coupled Plasma – Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS). All recruited patients are included irrespective of outcome. However some patients failed to attend specific follow-ups and some contaminated samples had to be discarded. Statistical significance was analyzed using a non-parametric comparison (Mann-Whitney test). After 3m and 12m implantation there were between 21 and 24 patients available for analysis in both the CoM and MoM cohort and after > 24m point 10 and 9 respectively.

There were four outliers (either Cr or Co > 10ug/l) in both the CoM and MoM groups. In common with previous studies (with the exception of two marginal outliers), these were related to component position. They were implanted with either a cup abduction angle of > 55°, an anteversion angle of > 30° or both. Other studies with the same design of component have reported no significant outliers.

The median Cr and the Co levels are lower with the CoM bearing compared with the MoM at all measurements points following implantation. The median background (pre-operative) levels for the combined CoM and MoM group were Cr: 0.22ug/l and Co: 0.49ug/l. These were significantly different (p=0.006).

In the CoM group, the median 12m Cr and Co values were 0.43ug/l and 0.72ug/l respectively. The comparable values for MoM are 0.68ug/l and 0.83ug/l. Increases in metal ion levels from pre-operative levels are used as the primary ion level outcome in this study because the background level will comprise of the order of 30–50% of the overall value. The increase in Cr for CoM and MoM from pre-op levels to 12m significantly different for Cr (p=0.015). It has a lower significance for combined metal ion levels (p=0.029). This difference in not significant for Co (p=0.195).

In agreement with predictions from hip simulator studies, CoM bearings in this study produced lower levels of metal ions than comparable MoM bearings at all time points. However the difference is less than that predicted in the laboratory and is much more pronounced with Cr than with Co.

Correspondence should be addressed to: EFORT Central Office, Technoparkstrasse 1, CH – 8005 Zürich, Switzerland. Email: office@efort.org