Abstract
Abstract
Introduction
Cementless total knee arthroplasty (TKA) offers a number of conceptual benefits including osteointegration, bone preservation and reduced aseptic loosening from third body wear. Evidence of equivalence to cemented fixation exists, but the cam-post interaction of posterior-stabilised (PS)-TKA on implant osteointegration remains uncertain. This study aims to assess the survivorship of a single prosthesis PS-TKA.
Methodology
All patients undergoing a PS-TKA using the Triathlon Total Knee System (Stryker Orthopaedics, USA) between 01/01/2010 and 08/04/2019, with exposure to at least 2 years’ risk of revision were identified from the hospital database.
Results
1001 TKAs were identified; 734 cementless and 267 cemented. The cementless group more frequently were male, younger, of higher BMI; and had larger components used (p<0.01). Mean exposure to risk of revision was longer in the cementless group (69.5 vs 57 months, p<0.05). Return to theatre rates were similar (4.6% vs 4.8% p = 0.88), a greater proportion in the cementless group underwent revision (2.9% vs 1.1% p=0.11). Multivariate analysis was only possible for reoperations, increased with cemented fixation (OR 2.34 CI 1.01-5.43) and decreased with age (OR 0.96 CI 0.92-1.00).
Conclusion
Both cementless and cemented Triathlon PS-TKA demonstrate excellent survivorship, with revision rates of 2.9% and 1.1% at a mean of 5.25 years. This difference was not statistically significant, and variations in baseline characteristics may have influenced it. Further study is planned to assess radiographs of these patients for evidence of osteointegration, and we advocate further study with greater patient numbers.