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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 13 - 13
22 Nov 2024
McNally M Dietz M Piuzzi N Chen A Parvizi J Stolarski E Pelt C Rodriguez-Quintana D Trautner B Dobbins D
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Aim. Antimicrobial peptides occur naturally in our intrinsic immune system. PLG0206 is a novel, engineered, 24-amino acid peptide which has broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity, including in biofilm and against multi-drug resistant pathogens (1,2). This is the first clinical study to evaluate the safety and tolerability of PLG0206 when administered via an irrigation solution in patients with periprosthetic joint infections (PJI) following total knee arthroplasty (TKA) during debridement, antibiotics, and implant retention (DAIR). Secondary objectives were to evaluate pharmacokinetics (PK), biomarkers and initial clinical efficacy at one year post-DAIR procedure. Method. This prospective, multicenter, open-label, interventional study assessed two dose levels of PLG0206. Fourteen patients underwent revision for PJI after TKA. At the end of debridement, they received a single intra-articular irrigation of PLG0206 into the wound cavity lasting 15 minutes at concentrations of 3 mg/mL (n=7) or 10 mg/mL (n=7). Patients received post-operative care and intravenous/oral antimicrobial therapy as per their institutional guidelines. Patients were monitored for safety and signs of relapse or persistent infection for 12 months post study drug administration and PK and blood biomarkers were assessed. Results. All patients completed their final study assessment at Day 365. Over the 1-year follow-up, only one recurrence (7%) was noted at Day 169 in the low-dose cohort. Following dosing, nine patients (64.3%) had limited systemic exposure; maximum plasma concentration occurred 1-hour post-administration and declined rapidly to undetectable levels by 24 hours following treatment in all patients. The incidence of drug related treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) was low. Two patients, both in the higher dose cohort, experienced a transient drug related TEAE; one of hypertransaminasaemia and one of neuralgia. Both events were moderate in severity and resolved within two weeks of onset. Conclusions. A single 15-minute irrigation of PLG0206 into the wound cavity of patients undergoing a DAIR procedure for PJI following TKA, is safe and well tolerated by patients. This new antimicrobial peptide offers a promising therapeutic option in musculoskeletal infection. The initial clinical efficacy is encouraging but now needs to be investigated in a much larger clinical trial


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 83 - 83
22 Nov 2024
Dudareva M Lama S Miyazaki K Scarborough C Wijendra A Tissingh E Kumin M Scarborough M McNally M
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Aim. The SOLARIO trial is a randomised controlled non-inferiority trial of antibiotic strategy for bone and joint infection. SOLARIO compares short or long post-operative systemic antibiotic duration, for patients with confirmed infections, who had local antibiotics implanted and no infected metalwork retained when undergoing surgery. This analysis compared systemic antibiotic use in the short (intervention) and long (standard of care) arms of the trial, in the 12 months after index surgery. Method. Data was collected prospectively from study randomisation, within 7 days of index surgery. All systemic antibiotics prescribed for the index infection were recorded, from health records and patient recall, at randomisation, 6 weeks, 3-6 months and 12 months after study entry. Start and end dates for each antibiotic were recorded. Results. 251 patients were randomised to short systemic antibiotics (up to 7 post-operative days) and 249 patients, to long systemic antibiotics. 5 participants in the short group and 2 participants in the long group withdrew from study follow-up. Complete data for all systemic antibiotics taken in the 12 months following surgery, were available for 237 participants in the short group and 236 participants in the long group. 80 participants across both groups were noted as having deviated from their assigned treatment strategy. Both groups received empiric antibiotics, predominantly vancomycin and meropenem, for up to 7 days after surgery. Considering each prescribed antibiotic as a separate duration (even when administered concurrently), participants assigned to standard care received a mean of 74.9 antibiotic-days. Participants assigned to short systemic antibiotics received a mean of 27.5 antibiotic-days in the 12 months after surgery. The most commonly prescribed antibiotics in both treatment groups were vancomycin and meropenem: these antibiotics accounted for 7.1 days prescribed per participant in the long group, and 6.3 days in the short group (p=0.37). Reasons for post-randomisation antibiotic prescribing in the short treatment group included later planned surgery, identification of bacteria requiring additional systemic antibiotics, and treatment of superficial wound infections. WHO AWaRe classification ‘watch’ and ‘reserve’ group antibiotics, such as ciprofloxacin, rifampicin, vancomycin and meropenem, accounted for 39.4 antibiotic-days per long group participant, and 16.5 antibiotic-days per short group participant. Conclusions. Considering the combined duration of all systemic antibiotics prescribed over 12 months, including those co-administered, participants in the short arm of the SOLARIO trial received considerably fewer days of all antibiotic classes, and particularly those antibiotics restricted in the WHO AWaRe classification (2021)


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 80 - 80
22 Nov 2024
Simon S Wouthuyzen-Bakker M Mitterer JA Gardete-Hartmann S Frank BJ Hofstaetter J
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Aim. It still remains unclear whether postoperative antibiotic treatment is advantageous in presumed aseptic revision-arthroplasties of the hip (rTHA) and knee (rTKA) with unexpected-positive-intraoperative-cultures (UPIC). The aim of this study was to evaluate if there is a difference in the septic and/or aseptic re-revision rate in patients with or without postoperative antibiotics. Method. In this retrospective propensity-score (PS) matched cohort-study we compared the re-revision rate and the microbiological spectrum in rTHA and rTKA treated with (AB-Group; n=70) and without (non-AB-Group; n=70) antibiotic treatment in patients with UPIC. Baseline covariates for PS-matching were type of revision, sex, Body-Mass-Index, age, Surgical-Site-Infection-Score, American-Society-of-Anesthesiologists-Classification, serum C-reactive-protein. All patients received routine antibiotic prophylaxis, but empiric AB treatment was started only in patients in the AB-Group. Post-operative treatment was decided on an individual basis according to the preference of the surgeon and the infectious disease specialist for a minimum duration of two weeks. In total, 90 rTHA (45 AB-Group, 45 in non-AB-Group) patients with UPICs and 50 rTKA (25 AB-Group, 25 in non-AB-Group) were included in the study. There was no significant variation in patient demographics. Results. After a median follow-up of 4.1 (IQR: 2.9-5.5) years after rTHA and rTKA, there was no higher re-revision rate (p=0.813) between the AB-group 10/70 (14.3%), and the non-AB-group 11/70 (15.7%). In the AB group, 4.3% (3/70) of patients underwent revision due to septic complications compared to 5.7% (4/70) in the non-AB group (survival log-rank: p=0.691). In total, 30/70 (42.9%) of patients in the AB-group and 23/70 (32.9%) of patients in the non-AB group were diagnosed as having an “infection likely” according to the PJI diagnostic criteria of EBJIS (p=0.223). All UPICs comprised low virulent microorganisms and were considered as a contaminant. In total, 68/70 (97.1%) of the patients in the AB-group received a dual antibiotic treatment for a mean duration of 41 (IQR: 23.5-56.5) days. Conclusion. Postoperative antibiotic treatment did not result in a decreased re-revision rate compared to non-antibiotic treatment in patients with UPIC in presumed aseptic rTHA and rTKA. UPICs with pathogens are likely to be a containment and therefore the classification of “infection likely” according to the EBJIS definition can be safely ignored


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_19 | Pages 27 - 27
22 Nov 2024
Dudareva M Lama S Scarborough C Miyazaki K Wijendra A Tissingh E Kumin M Scarborough M McNally M
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Aim. People awaiting surgery for bone and joint infection may be recommended to stop smoking to improve anaesthetic and surgical outcomes. However, restricting curative surgical treatment to non-smokers on the basis of potentially worse surgical outcomes is not validated for functional outcomes or quality of life differences between patients who do and do not smoke. This study used secondary analysis of trial data to ask: do peri-operative non-smokers have a greater improvement in their quality of life 12 months after surgery for bone and joint infection, compared with non-smokers?. Method. Participants in the SOLARIO and OVIVA clinical trials who had complete baseline and 12 month EQ-5D-5L or EQ-5D-3L scores were included. Smoking status was ascertained at baseline study enrolment from participant self-report. Normalised quality of life scores were calculated for participants at baseline and 12 months, based on contemporaneous health state scores for England. Baseline and 12 month scores were compared to calculate a post-operative increment in quality of life. Results. Mean quality of life increment over 12 months was +0.17 for people who reported smoking peri-operatively (95% confidence interval −0.55 to +0.89), compared to +0.23 for people who did not report smoking peri-operatively (95% confidence interval −0.48 to +0.94). Linear regression analysis found no significant difference between the improvement in quality of life for smokers and non-smokers (p>0.1). Mean increments for both groups were greater than estimates of Minimal Clinically Important Difference in quality of life in musculoskeletal conditions. [1,2]. Conclusions. People who smoke peri-operatively still experience an improvement in quality of life after surgery for orthopaedic infections, commensurate with the improvement experienced by non-smokers. Surgery should not be denied to people on the basis of reported smoking status alone


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 62 - 62
14 Nov 2024
Bafor A Lobst C
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Introduction. Previous studies have shown the potential for virtual reality (VR) immersion as a promising technique for pain and anxiety management. The aim of our study was to evaluate the feasibility of VR in the management of pain and anxiety during post-op external fixator care procedures. Method. This study involved patients aged 5-21 years following limb lengthening/reconstruction surgery with an external fixator. Aqua VR application from the KindVR® was utilized for this study. Subjects were seen during the first four postoperative visits and assigned to a ‘VR-first’ or ‘no-VR-first’ group. Visits alternated between VR immersion and no VR immersion during care procedures. The study endpoints (pain and anxiety levels) were assessed before, during, and after procedures using the Wong-Baker Faces (FACES) and Children's Fear Scale, respectively. Proxy scores for pain and anxiety were also obtained from parents or legal guardians and providers. Result. A total of 29 patients (16 male and 13 female) were evaluated. The mean age at enrollment was 14.4 ± 2.2 years for group 1 and 14.7 ± 4.0 years for group 2. The median number of pin sites was 7. Anxiety scores were consistently higher during the non-VR immersion experience compared to the VR immersion visits. The pain and anxiety scores were significantly lower in the ‘VR-first’ group during the non-VR immersion study visits compared to patients in the ‘no-VR-first’ group. This observation was also consistent with survey findings among the parent proxies and providers. Conclusion. VR immersion is associated with lower anxiety scores for pin-site care procedures. VR immersion at the first post-operative visit following limb reconstruction surgery was also associated with lower pain and anxiety scores during subsequent non-VR immersion visits


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 75 - 75
14 Nov 2024
Khalid T Shlomo YB Bertram W Culliford L enderson E Jepson M Johnson E Palmer S Whitehouse M Wylde V
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Introduction. Approximately 20-25% of patients having joint replacement in the UK have moderate-severe frailty. Frailty is associated with poorer outcomes after joint replacement. Targeting frailty pre-operatively with exercise and protein supplementation could improve post-operative outcomes. Prior to conducting a randomised controlled trial (RCT), a feasibility study was necessary to inform trial design and delivery. Method. We conducted a randomised feasibility study with embedded qualitative work. Patients aged ≥65 years, frail and undergoing THR or TKR were recruited from three UK hospitals. Participants were randomly allocated on a 1:1 ratio to the intervention or usual care group. The intervention group had a 1:1 appointment with a physiotherapist and were provided with a home-based, tailored daily exercise programme and a daily protein supplement for 12 weeks before their operation, supported by six telephone calls from a physiotherapist. Questionnaires were administered at baseline and 12 weeks after randomisation. Interviews were conducted with 19 patients. Feasibility outcomes were eligibility and recruitment rates, intervention adherence, and acceptability of the trial and the intervention. Result. 411 patients were sent a screening pack. Of the 168 patients who returned a screening questionnaire, 79 were eligible and consented to participate, and 64 were randomised. Of the 33 participants randomised to the intervention, 26 attended the intervention appointment. Eighteen participants (69%) received all six intervention follow-up telephone calls. Nineteen participants completed an intervention adherence log; 13 (68%) adhered to the exercise programme and 11 (58%) adhered to the protein supplementation. The overall retention rate was 86% at 12 weeks. The 12-week follow-up questionnaire was returned by 84% of participants who were sent a questionnaire. Interviews found that the trial and intervention were generally acceptable, but areas of potential improvements were identified. Conclusion. This study demonstrated that a larger study is possible and has identified improvements to optimise the design of a RCT


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 5 - 5
14 Nov 2024
Panagiota Glynou S Musbahi O Cobb J
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Introduction. Knee arthroplasty (KA), encompassing Total Knee Replacement (TKR) and Unicompartmental Knee Replacement (UKR), is one of the most common orthopedic procedures, aimed at alleviating severe knee arthritis. Postoperative KA management, especially radiographic imaging, remains a substantial financial burden and lacks standardised protocols for its clinical utility during follow-up. Method. In this retrospective multicentre cohort study, data were analysed from January 2014 to March 2020 for adult patients undergoing primary KA at Imperial NHS Trust. Patients were followed over a five-year period. Four machine learning models were developed to evaluate if post-operative X-ray frequency can predict revision surgery. The best-performing model was used to assess the risk of revision surgery associated with different number of X-rays. Result. The study assessed 289 knees with a 2.4% revision rate. The revision group had more X-rays on average than the primary group. The best performing model was Logistic Regression (LR), which indicated that each additional X-ray raised the revision risk by 52% (p<0.001). Notably, having four or more X-rays was linked to a three-fold increase in risk of revision (OR=3.02; p<0.001). Our results align with the literature that immediate post-operative X-rays have limited utility, making the 2nd post-operative X-ray of highest importance in understanding the patient's trajectory. These insights can enhance management by improving risk stratification for patients at higher revision surgery risk. Despite LR being the best-performing model, it is limited by the dataset's significant class imbalance. Conclusion. X-ray frequency can independently predict revision surgery. This study provides insights that can guide surgeons in evidence-based post-operative decision-making. To use those findings and influence post-operative management, future studies should build on this predictive model by incorporating a more robust dataset, surgical indications, and X-ray findings. This will allow early identification of high-risk patients, allowing for personalised post-operative recommendations


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 7 - 7
14 Nov 2024
Cullen D Thompson P Johnson D Lindner C
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Introduction. Accurate assessment of alignment in pre-operative and post-operative knee radiographs is important for planning and evaluating knee replacement surgery. Existing methods predominantly rely on manual measurements using long-leg radiographs, which are time-consuming to perform and are prone to reliability errors. In this study, we propose a machine-learning-based approach to automatically measure anatomical varus/valgus alignment in pre-operative and post-operative standard AP knee radiographs. Method. We collected a training dataset of 816 pre-operative and 457 one-year post-operative AP knee radiographs of patients who underwent knee replacement surgery. Further, we have collected a separate distinct test dataset with both pre-operative and one-year post-operative radiographs for 376 patients. We manually outlined the distal femur and the proximal tibia/fibula with points to capture the knee joint (including implants in the post-operative images). This included point positions used to permit calculation of the anatomical tibiofemoral angle. We defined varus/valgus as negative/positive deviations from zero. Ground truth measurements were obtained from the manually placed points. We used the training dataset to develop a machine-learning-based automatic system to locate the point positions and derive the automatic measurements. Agreement between the automatic and manual measurements for the test dataset was assessed by intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC), mean absolute difference (MAD) and Bland-Altman analysis. Result. Analysing the agreement between the manual and automated measurements, ICC values were excellent pre-/post-operatively (0.96, CI: 0.94-0.96) / (0.95, CI: 0.95-0.96). Pre-/post-operative MAD values were 1.3°±1.4°SD / 0.7°±0.6°SD. The Bland-Altman analysis showed a pre-/post-operative mean difference (bias) of 0.3°±1.9°SD/-0.02°±0.9°SD, with pre-/post-operative 95% limits of agreement of ±3.7°/±1.8°, respectively. Conclusion. The developed machine-learning-based system demonstrates high accuracy and reliability in automatically measuring anatomical varus/valgus alignment in pre-operative and post-operative knee radiographs. It provides a promising approach for automating the measurement of anatomical alignment without the need for long-leg radiographs. Acknowledgements. This research was funded by the Wellcome Trust [223267/Z/21/Z]


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 118 - 118
14 Nov 2024
Schlauch A Shah I Crawford B Martin A Denisov A Tamer P Farrell B
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Introduction. Distal femur fractures around a total knee arthroplasty (TKA) are a growing problem for orthopaedic surgeons. The purpose of this study was to identify risks of reoperation for nonunion following open reduction and internal fixation of TKA periprosthetic distal femur fractures (PDFF). Method. Patients with PDFF (AO 33A-C[VB1, C1, D1], Su types 1-3) managed operatively with open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) were retrospectively reviewed. Exclusion criteria were acute management with a distal femur replacement, less than 6 months of follow-up, and lack of injury or follow-up radiographs. The primary outcome measure was reoperation to achieve bony union. Comparisons were made between cases that did and did not require a reoperation to achieve union. Univariate analysis was used to identify factors to be analyzed in multivariate analysis to determine independent risk factors for the primary outcome. Result. A total of 77 patients met inclusion criteria. Union rate was 69/77 (89.6%). There were no differences between the groups for age, sex, BMI, comorbidities, Su classification, open injury, or mechanism of injury. Multivariate analysis identified risks for nonunion including post-operative malalignment (OR 1.41; CI 1.20-1.64; p<0.001), notching pre-operatively (OR 1.22; CI 1.04-1.42; p=0.012), presence of screws through fracture line (OR 1.28; CI 1.17-1.39; p<0.001), plate length <12 holes (OR 1.16; CI 1.02-1.33; p=0.024) and screw density greater than 0.4 (OR 2.18; CI 1.25-3.78; p=0.006). Conclusion. The reoperation rate to promote union was 10.4%. The study identified post-operative malalignment, notching pre-operatively, presence of screws through fracture line, plate length <12 holes, and proximal screw density greater than 40% as independent risk factors for nonunion


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_18 | Pages 107 - 107
14 Nov 2024
Thakur A Harris S Brkljač M Cobb J Logishetty K
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Introduction. Bernese periacetabular osteotomy (PAO) repositions the acetabulum to increase femoral head coverage (FHC) in hip dysplasia. Currently, there is a paucity of objective peri-operative metrics to plan for optimal acetabular fragment repositioning. The MSk Lab Hip 3D Planner (MSkL-HP) measures acetabular morphology and simulates PAO cuts to achieve optimal FHC. We evaluated how adjusting location and orientation of cutting planes can alter FHC. Method. MSkL-HP simulated 274 feasible PAOs on four dysplastic hips. Femoroacetabular anatomy was landmarked to simulate cutting planes. Posterior column and ischial cuts were standardised, whilst iliac and pubic cut combinations varied. The slope of the iliac cut was either neutral (aligned to pelvis), exit point 5mm above the entry point (+5), or 5mm below (-5). The slope of the pubic cut was either 90°, 50°, or 70° (medial-to-lateral). Iliac and pubic cuts were simulated 0, 5 and 15mm - distal and medial – to a classic cut. Outcome measures were achieved LCEA, Tönnis, FHC and % bone overlap at the pubic cut. Targets were LCEA >30°, Tönnis angle <10°, and FHC >70% and minimum bone overlap ≥10%. Results. All feasible PAOs resulted in improvement from pre-operative metrics. Personalised cutting planes provided greater benefit than standard planes. Kruskal Wallis tests showed that the iliac cut at 5mm or 15mm resulted in a greater LCEA and lower Tönnis compared to the classic cut (p<0.05). Changing location of the pubic cut, and slope of the iliac and pubic cuts did not significantly affect LCEA and Tönnis in all hips (p<0.05). Cut combinations optimising metrics were associated with a lower % pubic cut overlap. Conclusion. MSkL-HP feasibly and reliably planned personalised PAO, measuring pre-operative and simulated post-operative objective metrics. Patient-specific pubic and iliac cuts enable greater correction whilst maintaining bone overlap. Further simulations on patients with varying morphology may improve standard techniques


Introduction. Orthopedics is experiencing a significant transformation with the introduction of technologies such as robotics and apps. These, integrated into the post-operative rehabilitation process, promise to improve clinical outcomes, patient satisfaction, and the overall efficiency of the healthcare system. This study examines the impact of an app called Mymobility and intra-operative data collected via the ROSA® robotic system on the functional recovery of patients undergoing robot-assisted knee arthroplasty. Method. The study was conducted at a single center from 2020 to 2023. Data from 436 patients were included, divided into “active” patients (active users of Mymobility) and “non-active” patients. Clinical analyses and satisfaction surveys were carried out on active patients. The intra-operative parameters recorded by ROSA® were correlated with the Patient-Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) collected via Mymobility. Result. Intra-operative data showed significant correlations with PROMs for the 48 active patients, highlighting the importance of parameters such as medial joint space and ligament laxity. No significant differences were observed between the sexes, but a positive correlation was detected between age and PROMs. The data analysis indicated that an increased medial joint space and reduced ligament laxity are associated with better PROMs. The adoption of Mymobility remained limited, with only 10% of patients fully utilizing the app. Critical factors have been identified to improve recruitment, engagement, and overall experience with the platform. Conclusion. The integration of technologies such as Mymobility and ROSA® in post-operative rehabilitation offers numerous advantages, including the objectification of data, active patient involvement, and personalized care. Challenges remain related to costs, patient compliance, and demographic limitations. Nevertheless, these technologies represent a milestone in modern peri-operative management, being able to improve clinical outcomes and the quality of care


Restoration of native Coronal Plane Alignment of the Knee (CPAK) phenotype is a strategy suggested to achieve better satisfaction. The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of changes in CPAK classification on patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) and survivorship in a large cohort of manual mechanically aligned (MA) cemented TKAs. A retrospective analysis of 1062 consecutive cemented TKAs using MA philosophy at a single institution. Pre- and post-operative hip-knee-ankle radiographs were classified using the CPAK classification. Oxford Knee Score (OKS) and patient satisfaction (4-point-Likert scale) were collected prospectively. Implant survival data was obtained from our national arthroplasty database. We compared the outcomes of patients who maintained or changed their CPAK classification following TKA. Satisfaction was analysed using chi-square test, and OKS was analysed using Mann-Whitney test. Pre-operatively, most patients were CPAK type-I (38.8%). 85.5% of patients changed their CPAK type post-operatively, with CPAK type-V observed in 41.2% of these. Significantly better satisfaction (p=0.033) and OKS (p=0.021) were observed at one-year follow-up in patients who changed CPAK type, although the difference was below OKS minimally important clinical difference. There was no difference in satisfaction (p=0.73) and OKS (p=0.26) at one year between CPAK-V and non-V classifications. Post-operative CPAK type had no correlation with satisfaction and OKS. 12 TKAs (1.1%) were revised within 10 years (3 septic). In this large cohort of MA-TKA, excellent survivorship was observed at 10 years, with no demonstrable difference in outcome related to the final CPAK phenotype or change in phenotype


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 26 - 26
19 Aug 2024
Borsinger TM Chandi SK Neitzke CC Cororaton AD Valle AGD Chalmers BP
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Proponents of the direct anterior approach (DAA) for hip arthroplasty (THA) claim lower postoperative pain compared to the posterolateral approach (PA); however, whether that theoretical advantage results in lower opioid consumption is unclear. We sought to investigate the relationship between the DAA and PA on total 90-day predicted opioid consumption in a large cohort. Retrospective analysis identified 2,304 DAA and 6,288 PA primary THAs in patients >18 years old from February 2019 to April 2022. Ninety-day postoperative total morphine milligram equivalent (MME); in-hospital administration, discharge prescriptions, and refills within 90 days were compared between DAA and PA cohorts. Nearest-neighbor matching was performed controlling for age, sex, BMI, ASA, and periarticular injection to evaluate opioid consumption patterns for DAA and PA. Quantile regression was employed to predict the median (50th percentile) MME prescribed by surgical approach. After matching, DAA and PA demonstrated similar median total 90-day prescribed MME (p = 0.008). After adjusting for patient and surgical factors, quantile regression predicted a similar median total 90-day prescribed MME for DAA and PA (243.5 versus 242.7; p = 0.78). While approach did not demonstrate a significant relationship for predicted 90-day MME, other factors including age, sex, BMI, length of stay, peripheral anesthesia, periarticular injection, and white or Caucasian race demonstrated a significant relationship with predicted 90-day MME (p <0.0001). While we identified several risk factors for increased in-hospital and 90-day post-operative opioid consumption, a comparison between DAA and PA did not demonstrate significantly different opioid prescribing patterns


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 61 - 61
19 Aug 2024
Whitehouse MR Patel R French J Beswick A Navvuga P Marques E Blom A Lenguerrand E
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We investigated the revision rates of primary total hip replacement (THR) reported in the National Joint Registry (NJR) by types of bearing surfaces used. We analysed THR procedures across all orthopaedic units in England and Wales. Our analyses estimated all-cause and cause-specific revision rates. We identified primary THRs with heads and monobloc cups or modular acetabular component THRs with head and shell/liner combinations. We used flexible parametric survival models to estimate adjusted hazard ratios (HR). A total of 1,026,481 primary THRs performed between 2003–2019 are included in the primary analysis (Monobloc: n=378,979 and Modular: n=647,502) with 20,869 (2%) of these primary THRs subsequently undergoing a revision episode (Monobloc: n=7,381 and Modular: n=13,488). Compared to implants with a cobalt chrome head and highly crosslinked polyethylene (HCLPE) cup, the all-cause risk of revision for monobloc acetabular implant was higher for patients with cobalt chrome or stainless steel head and non-HCLPE cup. The risk of revision was lower for patients with a delta ceramic head and HCLPE cup implant, at any post-operative period. Compared to patients with a cobalt chrome head and HCLPE liner primary THR, the all-cause risk of revision for modular acetabular implant varied non-constantly. THRs with a delta ceramic or oxidised zirconium head and HCLPE liner had a lower risk of revision throughout the entire post-operative period. The all-cause and indication-specific risk of prosthesis revision, at different time points following the initial implantation, is lower for implants with a delta ceramic or oxidised zirconium head and a HCLPE liner/cup than commonly used alternatives such as cobalt chrome heads and HCLPE liner/cup


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 48 - 48
19 Aug 2024
Falez F Casella F Zaccagno S
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Post-operative peri-prosthetic femoral fracture (PO-PPFF) is one of the most relevant complications in primary Total Hip Arthroplasty (pTHA), accountable for a significant clinical and socio-economic burden both in revision and fixation settings. We retrospectively reviewed of our series of 1586 cementless total hip arthroplasty performed between 1999 and 2019 (achieving a minimum of 5-years follow-up) with different short stems. We have observed a cumulative low incidence of PO-PPFF of 0,33% (5 cases): we divided Po-PPFF in two groups: fracture occurred around a short stem (A) and around a standard shortened stem (B), according to French Hip & Knee Classification of Short Stems. Despite the length of observed period (mean follow-up 12 years, min 5 years max 24 years) a total of 1512 cases (mean age at surgery 61 years, max 74, min 40 years) were available to clinical and radiographic follow-up, being this population enrolled in elective surgery clinical protocols. Our data exceed the low incidence of post-operative femoral fracture around bone -preserving previously reported by Kim in 2018 (12 fracture out of 1089 cases:1.1%). No correlation have been observed among occurrence of PO-PPF age of the patient and no fracture occurred around cemented short stems despite patient's characteristics were unfavourable in term of age and bone quality. This result is not unexpected, giving the lower incidence of peri-prosthetic fracture even cemented conventional stems, as reported in all registry and systematic reviews. A similar behaviour was reported in 2020 Australian Joint Registry, where Post-operative periprosthetic femoral fracture showed a steep curve in early period, but remaining firmly below 1% during the following 12 years. Our clinical data seems to confirm previous studies by Jones (conducted on synthetic bone and fresh-frozen cadaveric femurs) where higher fracture angles and higher fracture torque were detected in short hips compared to standard stems


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 56 - 56
19 Aug 2024
McCalden RW Vasarhelyi EM Howard JL Lanting BA Naudie DD MacDonald SJ
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For over a decade, modular titanium fluted tapered (TFT) stems have demonstrated excellent clinical success for femoral revision total hip arthroplasty (THA) surgery. The aim of this study was to report the short-term outcomes of a novel modern monoblock TFT stem used for revision and complex primary THA with a minimum of 2 years follow-up. We identified 126 patients who received a single monoblock TFT stem - 26 patients for complex THA (failed fracture fixation) and 100 patients for revision THA. The reasons for revision THA included 40 for previous prosthetic joint infection (PJI), 42 for aseptic loosening, 9 for trunnionosis, 9 for periprosthetic fractures. The Paprosky grading for femoral bone loss at the time of surgery and the measured subsidence of femoral stems at 3 months follow-up were determined. We evaluated the number and indications for re-operations. The mean time from surgery was 3.9 years (range 2.0 to 6.9 years). A paired t-test analysis showed significant improvement from pre-operative versus post-operative clinical outcome scores (p<0.001) for HHS (38.76 +/- 15.24vs. 83.42 +/- 15.38), WOMAC (45.6 ± 19.0 vs. 69.9 ± 21.3) and SF-12 Physical component (31.7 ± 8.1 vs. 37.8 ± 11.3) and SF-12 Mental component (48.2 ± 12.2 vs. 51.6 ± 12.5). The Paprosky grading for femoral bone loss was Grade 1 (3.9%), Grade 2 (35.7%), Grade 3A (47.6%), Grade 3B (11.1%) and Grade 4 (1.6%) cases. There were 18 re-operations (14.7%) with 13 for PJI (7 treated with implant retention, 6 treated with a two-staged revision), 4 for instability and one for acetabular aseptic loosening. There were no aseptic failures of the stem. This novel modern monoblock TFT stem provided reliable femoral fixation and has increasingly supplanted the use of modular TFT stems for complex primary and revision surgery in our institution


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 87 - 87
19 Aug 2024
Logishetty K Verhaegen J Hutt J Witt J
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There is some evidence to suggest that outcomes of THA in patients with minimal radiographic osteoarthritis may not be associated with predictable outcomes. The aim of this study was to:. Assess the outcome of patients with hip pain who underwent THA with no or minimal radiographic signs of osteoarthritis,. Identify patient comorbidities and multiplanar imaging findings which are predictive of outcome,. Compare the outcome in these patients to the expected outcome of THA in hip OA. A retrospective review of 107 hips (102 patients, 90F:12M, median age 40.6, IQR 35.1–45.8 years, range 18–73) were included for analysis. Plain radiographs were evaluated using the Tonnis grading scale of hip OA. Outcome measures were all-cause revision; iHOT12; EQ-5D; Oxford Hip Score; UCLA Activity Scale; and whether THA had resulted in the patient's hip pain and function being Better/Same/Worse. The median Oxford Hip Score was 33.3 (IQR 13.9, range 13–48), and 36/107 (33.6%) hips achieved an OHS≥42. There was no association between primary hip diagnosis and post-operative PROMs. A total of 91 of the 102 patients (89.2%, 93 hips) reported that their hip pain and function was Better than prior to THA and would have the surgery again, 7 patients (6.8%, 10 hips) felt the Same, and 4 patients (3.9%, 4 hips) felt Worse and would not have the surgery again. Younger patients undergoing total hip arthroplasty with no or minimal radiographic osteoarthritis had lower postoperative Oxford Hip Scores than the general population; though most felt symptomatically better and knowing what they know now, would have surgery again. Those with chronic pain syndrome or hypermobility were likely to benefit less. Those with subchondral cysts or joint space narrowing on CT imaging were more likely to achieve higher functional scores and satisfaction


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 78 - 78
19 Aug 2024
Holland CT Leal J Easley ME Nunley JA Ryan SP Bolognesi MP Wellman SS Jiranek WA
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This study evaluates patient reported outcome measurement information system (PROMIS) scores after total hip arthroplasty (THA) and total ankle arthroplasty (TAA) in matched cohorts, while simultaneously evaluating implant survivorship and 90-day hospital utilization. It is hypothesized that while both procedures would yield similar PROMIS score improvements, THA would demonstrate superior mid-term implant survivorship. Primary THA and TAA patients from 2015–2022 with minimum one-year follow-up were retrospectively reviewed. After applying exclusion criteria, 2,092 THAs and 478 TAAs were included for analysis. Demographics, pre- and post-operative patient reported outcome measures (PROMs), revision surgeries, ED visits, and re-admissions were collected. THA and TAA patients were then propensity score matched at 2:1 ratio for age, sex, race, BMI, ASA, and comorbidities, resulting in a final cohort of 844 THAs and 455 TAAs for comparison. There were similar pre-operative PROMIS Pain Interference (PI) scores between THA and TAA, with both showing improvement at six weeks. However, THA patients exhibited lower PI scores at one year (53.0 versus 54.0; p=0.009). Pre-operative PROMIS Physical Function (PF) was worse in THA patients but showed greater improvement compared to TAA patients at both six weeks (p<0.001) and one year (p<0.001). Pre-operative PROMIS depression scores were similar and improved similarly in both groups. Joint-specific PROMs (HOOS for THA and FAAM for TAA) improved in both cohorts. THA demonstrated superior survivorship free of all-cause revision at five years compared to TAA (95% versus 77%; p<0.0001). Patients undergoing THA or TAA experienced significant improvements in their general and joint-specific PROMs post-operatively. However, patients undergoing THA demonstrated higher PROMIS PI and PF scores at one-year when compared to TAA, as well as improved survivorship. Generic PRO instruments enable comparison of medical treatments in different anatomic sites to the patients overall health


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 97 - 97
19 Aug 2024
Ilo K Van Duren BH Higgins MA Manktelow ARJ Bloch BV
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We report the impact of implementing a new short-stay hip and knee arthroplasty pathway in a National Health Service (NHS) hospital. This was enacted due to existing concerns with a long length of stay (LOS) and reduced elective operating capacity each winter due to emergency bed pressures. The overnight introduction of this pathway was aimed to reduce LOS, alleviate bed pressures, minimise readmission rates and generate financial savings, all combining to facilitate full elective activity during the winter. We conducted a prospective study at a regional tertiary arthroplasty centre. The new pathway was introduced across the service overnight. It includes rigorous preoperative optimisation, specific anaesthetic protocols and uniform changes in surgical practice to allow a focus on early mobilization and discharge on the day of surgery where possible. Data collection spanned 17 months, including the initial six months post implementation of the short-stay pathway. LOS data was collected for the full period and data was compared pre- and post-implementation of the new pathway. Patient satisfaction and 30-day readmission data were also collected. There was an immediate and significant decrease in median LOS from 4 days pre-implementation to 1 day post-implementation. Patient satisfaction was high, and the 30-day readmission rate was unchanged (5.95%), with no readmissions directly related to decreased inpatient stay. Financial analyses revealed substantial cost savings due to reduced LOS and the elimination of routine post-operative blood tests, estimated at over £1.6m per year. Elective activity over winter was significantly higher (79%) than in the same time period in the previous year. An acute introduction of a carefully planned and coordinated short-stay hip and knee pathway is safe, cost-effective and popular with patients, but also contributes to increased efficiency in the delivery of elective healthcare in the context of increasing demand and financial constraints in the NHS


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 10 - 10
19 Aug 2024
Thomson AL Chao CA Hammad M Mendia M Bostrom MPG Carli AV
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Retained polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) debris in surgical instrument trays is a rare, but disquieting situation for the arthroplasty surgeon. Although retained debris could be considered to be sterile after autoclaving, there is no peer-reviewed literature to support this assumption. This uncertainty and subsequent fear of contamination from this bioburden often leads to operating room personnel turning over entire surgical tables and opening new surgical instruments, which consumes time and burdens a hospital's sterilization infrastructure. Consequently, the purpose of the current study was to determine if retained, heavily contaminated PMMA in surgical trays could be effectively sterilized through clinically utilized autoclave protocols. MSSA (Xen36, Perkin Elmer) biofilm was grown on identically sized PMMA (Palacos R) coupons for 72-hour duration. Following incubation, coupons were exposed to three commonly used sterilization protocols. Cobalt-Chrome (CC) coupons were included in the same tray, replicating instruments in proximity to retained PMMA. Autoclave protocols included: 1.) Single Instrument Flash protocol: Pre-vac, 270° F, 10 min exposure, 1 min drying, 2.) One Tray OR protocol: Pre-vac, 270° F, 4 min exposure, 1 min drying, and 3.) Standard Post-Operative protocol: Pre-vac, 270° F, 10 min exposure, 60 min drying. Control coupons did not undergo autoclaving. Coupons were then sonicated for 30 minutes in tryptic soy broth and plated to count CFUs. Experiments were performed in quadruplicate. Control coupons showed significant contamination with CFU counts in the range of 10. 6. CFU/mL. CFU counts of zero across all autoclaved PMMA and CC coupons revealed that each protocol was effective in completely eradicating culturable S. aureus, confirming clinical efficacy on orthopaedic cement sterilized in surgical trays. Our findings demonstrate that heavily contaminated PMMA and exposed metal in surgical trays can be effectively sterilized through several autoclaving protocols. Clinicians should feel confident in the efficacy of autoclave protocols in removing bacteria and its associated biofilm from othopaedic materials