Abstract
Aim
To assess the survival of revision knee replacements at our institution and to identify prognostic factors that predict failure in revision knee surgery.
Materials and methods
This was a retrospective review of 52 patients who had undergone revision knee surgery as identified by hospital clinical coding. Patient demographics, physiological parameters, reason for revision, type of revision implant and last date of follow up were recorded from the medical records. Implant survival was analysed both from the index primary procedure to revision and from definitive reconstruction at revision to re-operation for any cause.
Results
The median time from index primary to first revision was 1428 days (331-5000). A P value of 0.05 was set as the significance level. Patients with a diagnosis of inflammatory arthropathy had a significantly shorter time to revision compared to those with osteoarthritis. Time to revision was not significantly different for those being revised for infection and those not infected. Following reconstruction, there was no significant difference in the reoperation rates for infected vs non-infected implants. The 5-year implant survival for all revision knee replacements with re-operation for any cause as the end point was 72.2% (95%CI 52.3-87.9). At 5 years there was no significant difference in implant survival of infected and non-infected revisions.
Conclusion
The implant survival of revision knee replacements for all causes in our institute was 72.2% at 5 years. There was no significant difference in 5-year survival between infected and non-infected revisions. Patients with an inflammatory arthropathy had a significantly shorter time to revision compared to those with osteoarthritis.