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General Orthopaedics

FEMORAL NECK MODULARITY: BOTH SIDES NOW

The Current Concepts in Joint Replacement (CCJR) Winter Meeting, 14 – 17 December 2016.



Abstract

Distal neck modularity places a modular connection at a mechanically critical location, which is also the location that confers perhaps the greatest clinical utility. The benefits of increased clinical options at that location must be weighed against the potential risks of adding an additional junction to the construct. Those risks include prosthetic neck fracture, taper corrosion, metal hypersensitivity, and adverse local tissue reaction. Further, in-vitro testing of ultimate or fatigue strength of femoral component designs has repeatedly failed to predict behavior in-vivo, raising questions about the utility of in-vitro testing that does not incorporate the effect of mechanically assisted crevice corrosion into the test design.

The material properties of Ti alloy and CoCr alloy place limits on design considerations in the proximal femur. The smaller taper junctions that are necessary for primary reconstruction are particularly vulnerable to failure whereas larger taper junctions commonly used in revision modular femoral component designs have greater opportunity for success. Modular junctions of CoCr alloy on conventional Ti alloy have been shown to have a greater incidence of clinically significant mechanically assisted crevice corrosion and adverse reaction. Designs that have proven clinical strength and utility universally have larger, more robust junctions, that extend into the metaphysis of the femur. While these designs are primarily designed for revision total hip replacement (THR), they are occasionally indicated for primary THR. Overall, however, while design options at the neck-stem junction have unmatched clinical utility, no design that does not extend into the metaphysis has proven to be universally reliable. While routine use of modular neck components for primary THR does not appear to be clinically indicated based on current evidence, modular designs with proven successful proximal junctions appear to be indicated for revision THR and rare primary THR with extreme version or other anatomical circumstances.