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OUTCOME OF AN EXTENSIVELY HA-COATED STEM AT 18-YEAR FOLLOW-UP: A PROSPECTIVE STUDY OF 615 CASES



Abstract

Bio-active fixation has increasingly gained acceptance over the last two decades. However extent of the coating is still a subject of debate. We introduced in 1986, the concept of total osteointegration of a tapered stem with the hope that we could achieve durable biological fixation while preserving normal periprosthetic bone trophicity.

Patients from our first clinical series using this stem are now eligible for 18-year follow up. Between July 1986 and December 1990, we performed 615 THA using the Corail stem (DePuy). Corail is a straight tapered stem totally coated with a 150 μthick layer of HA following an atmospheric plasma-spray process. The mean age at surgery was 64.5 (range 16 to 95). 242 patients are now deceased (39%), 62 patients (10%) are lost to follow-up. The mean follow-up for 243 living patients on file is 17.7 years.

Eighty nine THA’s required component revisions: 72 cups, 9 stems, 8 “cups and stems”. 8 cups and 4 stems have been revised for aseptic loosening. Owing to the high incidence of wear-related revision, Kaplan-Meïer survivorship at 18-year follow-up, using component revision for any reason as an endpoint, was 80.7 ± 3.3 (95% confidence intervals). In contrast, Corail stem survivorship, using stem removal for any reason as an endpoint, was 95.0% ± 3.0 at 18-year follow-up, and considering aseptic loosening only, the survival probability of the stem is 98.9% ± 1.1 at 18 years.

Therefore, despite wear and proximal osteolysis, the fixation achieved with this totally HA-coated stem remained durable through 18-year follow-up. Regarding the periprosthetic remodelling during this period, modifications of the bone pattern have been strictly limited: slight resorption at the calcar level, absence of cortical hypertrophy, anecdotic significant stress-shielding. The radiological silence is one of the paramount facts demonstrated by this prospective study.

Correspondence should be addressed to Editorial Secretary Mr ML Costa or Assistant Editorial Secretary Mr B.J. Ollivere at BOA, 35–43 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London WC2A 3PE, England; Email: mattcosta@hotmail.com or ben@ollivere.co.uk