Advertisement for orthosearch.org.uk
Results 1 - 20 of 51
Results per page:
The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 105-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1052 - 1059
1 Oct 2023
El-Sahoury JAN Kjærgaard K Ovesen O Hofbauer C Overgaard S Ding M

Aims. The primary outcome was investigating differences in wear, as measured by femoral head penetration, between cross-linked vitamin E-diffused polyethylene (vE-PE) and cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE) acetabular component liners and between 32 and 36 mm head sizes at the ten-year follow-up. Secondary outcomes included acetabular component migration and patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) such as the EuroQol five-dimension questionnaire, 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey, Harris Hip Score, and University of California, Los Angeles Activity Scale (UCLA). Methods. A single-blinded, multi-arm, 2 × 2 factorial randomized controlled trial was undertaken. Patients were recruited between May 2009 and April 2011. Radiostereometric analyses (RSAs) were performed from baseline to ten years. Of the 220 eligible patients, 116 underwent randomization, and 82 remained at the ten-year follow-up. Eligible patients were randomized into one of four interventions: vE-PE acetabular liner with either 32 or 36 mm femoral head, and XLPE acetabular liner with either 32 or 36 mm femoral head. Parameters were otherwise identical except for acetabular liner material and femoral head size. Results. A total of 116 patients participated, of whom 77 were male. The median ages of the vE-PE 32 mm and 36 mm groups were 65 (interquartile range (IQR) 57 to 67) and 63 years (IQR 56 to 66), respectively, and of the XLPE 32 mm and 36 mm groups were 64 (IQR 58 to 66) and 61 years (IQR 54 to 66), respectively. Mean total head penetration was significantly lower into vE-PE acetabular liner groups than into XLPE acetabular liner groups (-0.219 mm (95% confidence interval -0.348 to -0.090); p = 0.001). There were no differences in wear according to head size, acetabular component migration, or PROMs, except for UCLA. There were no cases of aseptic loosening or failures requiring revision at long-term follow-up. Conclusion. Significantly lower wear was observed in vE-PE acetabular liners than in XLPE acetabular liners. No difference in wear was observed between different head size or PROMs except for the UCLA at ten years. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2023;105-B(10):1052–1059


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 9 | Pages 1479 - 1487
1 Sep 2021
Davis ET Pagkalos J Kopjar B

Aims

The aim of our study was to investigate the effect of asymmetric crosslinked polyethylene liner use on the risk of revision of cementless and hybrid total hip arthroplasties (THAs).

Methods

We undertook a registry study combining the National Joint Registry dataset with polyethylene manufacturing characteristics as supplied by the manufacturers. The primary endpoint was revision for any reason. We performed further analyses on other reasons including instability, aseptic loosening, wear, and liner dissociation. The primary analytic approach was Cox proportional hazard regression.


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 4, Issue 11 | Pages 839 - 845
6 Nov 2023
Callary SA Sharma DK D’Apollonio TM Campbell DG

Aims. Radiostereometric analysis (RSA) is the most accurate radiological method to measure in vivo wear of highly cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE) acetabular components. We have previously reported very low wear rates for a sequentially irradiated and annealed X3 XLPE liner (Stryker Orthopaedics, USA) when used in conjunction with a 32 mm femoral heads at ten-year follow-up. Only two studies have reported the long-term wear rate of X3 liners used in conjunction with larger heads using plain radiographs which have poor sensitivity. The aim of this study was to measure the ten-year wear of thin X3 XLPE liners against larger 36 or 40 mm articulations with RSA. Methods. We prospectively reviewed 19 patients who underwent primary cementless THA with the XLPE acetabular liner (X3) and a 36 or 40 mm femoral head with a resultant liner thickness of at least 5.8 mm. RSA radiographs at one week, six months, and one, two, five, and ten years postoperatively and femoral head penetration within the acetabular component were measured with UmRSA software. Of the initial 19 patients, 12 were available at the ten-year time point. Results. The median proximal, 2D, and 3D wear rates calculated between one and ten years were all less than 0.005 mm/year, with no patient recording a proximal wear rate of more than 0.021 mm/year. Importantly, there was no increase in the wear rate between five and ten years. Conclusion. The very low wear rate of X3 XLPE liners with larger articulations remains encouraging for the future clinical performance of this material. Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2023;4(11):839–845


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 104-B, Issue 7 | Pages 833 - 843
1 Jul 2022
Kayani B Baawa-Ameyaw J Fontalis A Tahmassebi J Wardle N Middleton R Stephen A Hutchinson J Haddad FS

Aims. This study reports the ten-year wear rates, incidence of osteolysis, clinical outcomes, and complications of a multicentre randomized controlled trial comparing oxidized zirconium (OxZr) versus cobalt-chrome (CoCr) femoral heads with ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) and highly cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE) liners in total hip arthroplasty (THA). Methods. Patients undergoing primary THA were recruited from four institutions and prospectively allocated to the following treatment groups: Group A, CoCr femoral head with XLPE liner; Group B, OxZr femoral head with XLPE liner; and Group C, OxZr femoral head with UHMWPE liner. All study patients and assessors recording outcomes were blinded to the treatment groups. The outcomes of 262 study patients were analyzed at ten years’ follow-up. Results. Patients in Group C were associated with increased mean liner wear rates compared to patients in Group A (0.133 mm/yr (SD 0.21) vs 0.031 mm/yr (SD 0.07), respectively; p < 0.001) and Group B (0.133 mm/yr (SD 0.21) vs 0.022 mm/yr (SD 0.05), respectively; p < 0.001) at ten years’ follow-up. Patients in Group C were also associated with increased risk of osteolysis and aseptic loosening requiring revision surgery, compared with patients in Group A (7/133 vs 0/133, respectively; p = 0.007) and Group B (7/133 vs 0/135, respectively; p = 0.007). There was a non-statistically significant trend towards increased mean liner wear rates in Group A compared with Group B (0.031 mm/yr (SD 0.07) vs 0.022 mm/yr (SD 0.05), respectively; p = 0.128). All three groups were statistically comparable preoperatively and at ten years’ follow-up when measuring normalized Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (p = 0.410), 36-Item Short Form Health Survey (p = 0.465 mental, p = 0.713 physical), and pain scale scores (p = 0.451). Conclusion. The use of UHMWPE was associated with progressively increased annual liner wear rates after THA compared to XLPE. At ten years’ follow-up, the group receiving UHMWPE demonstrated an increased incidence of osteolysis and aseptic loosening requiring revision surgery compared to XLPE. Femoral heads composed of OxZr were associated with trend towards reduced wear rates compared to CoCr, but this did not reach statistical significance and did not translate to any differences in osteolysis, functional outcomes, or revision surgery between the two femoral head components. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2022;104-B(7):833–843


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1303 - 1310
3 Oct 2020
Kjærgaard K Ding M Jensen C Bragdon C Malchau H Andreasen CM Ovesen O Hofbauer C Overgaard S

Aims. The most frequent indication for revision surgery in total hip arthroplasty (THA) is aseptic loosening. Aseptic loosening is associated with polyethylene liner wear, and wear may be reduced by using vitamin E-doped liners. The primary objective of this study was to compare proximal femoral head penetration into the liner between a) two cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE) liners (vitamin E-doped (vE-PE)) versus standard XLPE liners, and b) two modular femoral head diameters (32 mm and 36 mm). Methods. Patients scheduled for a THA were randomized to receive a vE-PE or XLPE liner with a 32 mm or 36 mm metal head (four intervention groups in a 2 × 2 factorial design). Head penetration and acetabular component migration were measured using radiostereometric analysis at baseline, three, 12, 24, and 60 months postoperatively. The Harris Hip Score, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Activity Score, EuroQol five-dimension questionnaire (EQ-5D), and 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey questionnaire (SF-36) were assessed at baseline, three, 12, 36, and 60 months. Results. Of 220 screened patients, 127 were included in this study. In all, 116 received the allocated intervention, and 94 had their results analyzed at five years. Head penetration was similar between liner materials and head sizes at five years, vE-PE versus XLPE was -0.084 mm (95% confidence interval (CI) -0.173 to 0.005; p = 0.064), and 32 mm versus 36 mm was -0.020 mm (95% CI -0.110 to 0.071; p = 0.671), respectively. No differences were found in acetabular component migration or in the patient-reported outcome measures. Conclusion. No significant difference in head penetration was found at five years between vE-PE and XLPE liners, nor between 32 mm and 36 mm heads. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2020;102-B(10):1303–1310


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 7 Supple B | Pages 105 - 111
1 Jul 2020
Engh, Jr. CA McAsey CJ Cororaton AD Ho H Hopper, Jr. RH

Aims. The purpose of this study is to examine six types of bearing surfaces implanted at a single institution over three decades to determine whether the reasons for revision vary among the groups and how long it takes to identify differences in survival. Methods. We considered six cohorts that included a total of 1,707 primary hips done between 1982 and 2010. These included 223 conventional polyethylene sterilized with γ irradiation in air (CPE-GA), 114 conventional polyethylene sterilized with gas plasma (CPE-GP), 116 crosslinked polyethylene (XLPE), 1,083 metal-on-metal (MOM), 90 ceramic-on-ceramic (COC), and 81 surface arthroplasties (SAs). With the exception of the COC, all other groups used cobalt-chromium (CoCr) femoral heads. The mean follow-up was 10 (0.008 to 35) years. Descriptive statistics with revisions per 100 component years (re/100 yr) and survival analysis with revision for any reason as the endpoint were used to compare bearing surfaces. Results. XLPE liners demonstrated a lower cumulative incidence of revision at 15 years compared to the CPE-GA and CPE-GP groups owing to the absence of wear-related revisions (4% for XLPE vs 18%, p = 0.02, and 15%, p = 0.003, respectively). Revisions for adverse local tissue reactions occurred exclusively among the MOM (0.8 re/100 year) and SA groups (0.1 re/100 year). The revision rate for instability was lower among hips with 36 mm and larger head sizes compared to smaller head sizes (0.2% vs 2%, p < 0.001). Conclusion. The introduction of XLPE has eliminated wear-related revisions through 15-year follow-up compared to CPE-GP and CPE-GA. Dislocation incidence has been reduced with the introduction of larger diameter heads but remains a persistent concern. The potential for adverse local tissue reactions with MOM requires continued follow-up. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2020;102-B(7 Supple B):105–111


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 14 - 14
1 Nov 2021
Nicoules S Zaoui A Hage SE Scemama C Langlois J Courpied J Hamadouche M
Full Access

The purpose of this study was to compare oxinium versus metal-on-polyethylene wear in two consecutive prospective randomized series of low friction total hip arthroplasty at a minimum 10-year follow-up. A total of 100 patients with a median age of 60.9 years were randomized to receive either oxinium (50 hips) or metal (50 hips) femoral head. The polyethylene socket was EtO sterilized in the first 50 patients, whereas it was highly cross-linked and remelted (XLPE) in the following 50 patients. The primary criterion for evaluation was linear head penetration measurement using the Martell system by an investigator blinded to the material. Also, a survivorship analysis was performed using wear related loosening revised or not as the end point. Complete data were available for analysis in 40 hips at a median follow-up of 12.9 years (11 to 14), and in 36 hips at a median follow-up of 12.3 years (10 to 13) in the EtO sterilized and XLPE series, respectively. In the EtO sterilized series, the mean steady-state wear rate was 0.245 ± 0.080 mm/year in the oxinium group versus 0.186 ± 0.062 mm/year in the metal group (p = 0.009). In the XLPE series, the mean steady-state wear rate was 0.037±0.016 mm/year in the oxinium group versus 0.036±0.015 mm/year in the metal group (p = 0.94). The survival rate at 10 years was 100% in both XLPE series, whereas it was 82.9% (IC 95%, 65–100) and 70.5% (IC95%, 50.1–90.9) in the metal-EtO and oxinium-EtO series, respectively. This RCT demonstrated that up to 14-year follow-up, wear was significantly reduced when using XLPE, irrespective of the femoral head material. Also, no osteolysis related complication was observed in the XLPE series. In the current study, oxinium femoral heads showed no advantage over metal heads and therefore their continued used should be questioned related to their cost


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 99-B, Issue 12 | Pages 1590 - 1595
1 Dec 2017
Atrey A Ward SE Khoshbin A Hussain N Bogoch E Schemitsch EH Waddell JP

Aims. We present the ten-year data of a cohort of patients, aged between 18 and 65 years (mean age 52.7 years; 19 to 64), who underwent total hip arthroplasty. Patients were randomised to be treated with a cobalt-chrome (CoCr) femoral head with an ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE), highly cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE) or ceramic-on-ceramic (CoC) bearing surface. Patients and Methods. A total of 102 hips (91 patients) were randomised into the three groups. At ten years, 97 hips were available for radiological and functional follow-up. Two hips (two patients) had been revised (one with deep infection and one for periprosthetic fracture) and three were lost to follow-up. Radiological analysis was performed using a validated digital assessment programme to give linear, directional and volumetric wear of the two polyethylene groups. Results. There was a significantly reduced rate of steady-state linear wear with XLPE (0.07 mm/yr) compared with UHMWPE (0.37 mm/yr) (p = 0.001). Volumetric wear was also significantly reduced in the XLPE group (29.29 mm. 3. /yr) compared with the UHMWPE group (100.75mm. 3. /yr) (p = 0.0001). There were six patients with UHMWPE who had non-progressive osteolysis and none in the XLPE group. All three bearing groups had significant improvements in 12-item short form health survey scores, Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index score and Harris Hip Score. However, the improvement in HSS was significantly less in the UHMWPE group (p = 0.0188) than in the other two groups. At ten years, the rates of volumetric and linear wear in the XLPE group remain low and predominantly below the estimated threshold for osteolysis (1 mm/yr). The rate of linear wear in the XLPE group was three times less than in the UHMWPE group at five-year follow-up and five times less at ten years. The rate of volumetric wear was also three times less in the XLPE group at ten years. Conclusion. While CoC also performs well, XLPE at ten years remains a safe and excellent bearing option in young patients, with low rates of wear and no evidence of osteolysis. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2017;99-B:1590–5


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 97-B, Issue 7 | Pages 883 - 889
1 Jul 2015
Jassim SS Patel S Wardle N Tahmassebi J Middleton R Shardlow DL Stephen A Hutchinson J Haddad FS

Oxidised zirconium (OxZi) has been developed as an alternative bearing surface for femoral heads in total hip arthroplasty (THA). This study has investigated polyethylene wear, functional outcomes and complications, comparing OxZi and cobalt–chrome (CoCr) as part of a three-arm, multicentre randomised controlled trial. Patients undergoing THA from four institutions were prospectively randomised into three groups. Group A received a CoCr femoral head and highly cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE) liner; Group B received an OxZi femoral head and XLPE liner; Group C received an OxZi femoral head and ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) liner. At five years, 368 patients had no statistically significant differences in short-form-36 (p = 0.176 mental, p = 0.756 physical), Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (p = 0.847), pain scores (p = 0.458) or complications. The mean rate of linear wear was 0.028 mm/year (standard deviation (. sd) 0.010). for Group A, 0.023 mm/year (. sd. 0.010) for Group B, and 0.09 mm/year (. sd. 0.045) for Group C. Penetration was significantly higher in the UHMWPE liner group compared with both XLPE liner groups (p < 0.001) but no significant difference was noted between CoCr and OxZi when articulating with XLPE (p = 0.153). In this, the largest randomised study of this bearing surface, it appears that using a XLPE acetabular liner is more important in reducing THA component wear than the choice of femoral head bearing, at mid-term follow-up. There is a non-significant trend towards lower wear, coupling OxZi rather than CoCr with XLPE but long-term analysis is required to see if this observation changes with time and becomes significant. Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2015;97-B:883–9


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 104-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 18 - 18
1 Apr 2022
Kayani B Baawa J Fontalis A Tahmassebi J Wardle N Middleton R Hutchinson J Haddad FS
Full Access

This study reports the ten-year polyethylene liner wear rates, incidence of osteolysis, clinical outcomes and complications of a three-arm, multicentre randomised controlled trial comparing Cobalt-Chrome (CoCr) and Oxidised Zirconium (OxZr) femoral heads with ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) versus highly cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE) liners in total hip arthroplasty (THA). Patients undergoing THA from four institutions were prospectively randomised into three groups. Group A received a CoCr femoral head and XLPE liner; Group B received an OxZr femoral head and XLPE liner; and Group C received an OxZr femoral head and UHMWPE liner. Blinded observers recorded predefined outcomes in 262 study patients at regular intervals for ten years following THA. At ten years follow-up, increased linear wear rates were recorded in group C compared to group A (0.133 ± 0.21 mm/yr vs 0.031 ± 0.07 mm/yr respectively, p<0.001) and group B (0.133 ± 0.21 mm/yr vs 0.022 ± 0.05 mm/yr respectively, p<0.001). Patients in group C were associated with increased risk of osteolysis and aseptic loosening requiring revision surgery compared with group A (7/133 vs 0/133 respectively, p=0.007) and group B (7/133 vs 0/135 respectively, p=0.007). There was a non-significant trend towards increased liner wear rates in group A compared to group B (0.031 ± 0.07 mm/yr vs 0.022 ± 0.05 mm/yr respectively, p=0.128). All three groups were statistically comparable preoperatively and at ten years follow-up when measuring normalised Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index(p=0.410), short-form-36 (p = 0.465 mental, p = 0.713 physical), and pain scale scores (p=0.451). The use of UHMWPE was associated with progressively increased annual liner wear rates after THA. At ten years follow-up, this translated to UHMWPE leading to an increased incidence of osteolysis and aseptic loosening requiring revision THA, compared with XLPE. Femoral heads composed of OxZr were associated with a non-significant trend towards reduced wear rates compared to CoCr, but this did not translate to any differences in osteolysis, functional outcomes, or revision surgery between the two treatments groups


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_16 | Pages 62 - 62
19 Aug 2024
Devane PA Horne JG Chu A
Full Access

We present minimum 20 year results of a randomized, prospective double blinded trial (RCT) of cross-linked versus conventional polyethylene (PE), using a computer assisted method of PE wear measurement. After Ethics Committee approval, 122 patients were enrolled into an RCT comparing Enduron (non cross-linked PE) and highly cross-linked Marathon PE (DePuy, Leeds, UK). Other than the PE liners, identical components were used, a Duraloc 300 metal shell with one screw, a 28mm CoCr femoral head and a cemented Charnley Elite femoral stem. All patients were followed with anteroposterior (A∼P) and lateral radiographs at 3 days, 6 weeks, 3 months, 6 months, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10 and 20 years. PE wear was measured with PolyMig, which has a phantom validated accuracy of ± 0.09mm. At minimum 20 year follow-up, 47 patients had died, 5 of which had been revised prior to their death. Another 32 patients were revised and alive, leaving 43 patients unrevised and alive (15 Enduron, 28 Marathon). No patients were lost to follow-up, but 2 were not able to be radiographed (dementia), leaving 41 patients (15 Enduron, 26 Marathon) available for PE wear measurement. After the bedding-in period, Enduron liners had a wear rate of 0.182 mm/year, and Marathon liners had a wear rate of 0.028 mm/year. At 20 years follow-up, 37 patients had required revision. Patients with conventional PE had three times the revision rate (28/37) of those who received XLPE (9/37). This is the longest term RCT showing substantially improved clinical and radiological results when XLPE is used as the bearing surface


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 15 - 15
1 Nov 2021
Kayani B Bawwa J Tahmassebi J Fontalis A Wardle N Middleton R Shardlow D Hutchinson J Haddad F
Full Access

This study reports the ten-year outcomes of a three-arm, multicentre randomised controlled trial comparing Cobalt-Chrome (CoCr) and Oxidised Zirconium (OxZr) femoral heads with ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) versus highly cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE) liners in total hip arthroplasty (THA). Patients undergoing THA from four institutions were prospectively randomised into three groups. Group A received a CoCr femoral head and XLPE liner; Group B received an OxZr femoral head and XLPE liner; and Group C received an OxZr femoral head and UHMWPE liner. The outcomes of 262 study patients were analysed at ten years follow-up. At ten years, increased linear wear rates were recorded in group C compared to group A (0.133 ± 0.21 mm/yr vs 0.031 ± 0.07 mm/yr respectively, p<0.001) and group B (0.133 ± 0.21 mm/yr vs 0.022 ± 0.05 mm/yr respectively, p<0.001). Patients in group C had increased risk of osteolysis and aseptic loosening requiring revision surgery compared with group A (7/133 vs 0/133 respectively, p=0.007) and group B (7/133 vs 0/135 respectively, p=0.007). There was a non- significant trend towards increased liner wear rates in group A compared to group B (0.031 ± 0.07 mm/yr vs 0.022 ± 0.05 mm/yr respectively, p=0.128). All three groups were statistically comparable preoperatively and at ten years follow-up from a clinical score perspective. The use of UHMWPE was associated with progressively increased annual liner wear rates. At ten years follow-up, this translated to an increased incidence of osteolysis and aseptic loosening requiring revision, compared with XLPE. Femoral heads composed of OxZr were associated with a non-significant trend towards reduced wear rates compared to CoCr, but this did not translate to any differences in osteolysis, functional outcomes, or revision surgery between the two treatments groups


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 12 - 12
1 Nov 2021
Cordero-Ampuero J Velasco P
Full Access

To compare complications, survivorship and results in 2 groups of Furlong-HAP Active, one with ceramic-ceramic and the other with metal-XLPE friction pair. Prospective, non-randomized, comparison of 2 series of JRI uncemented prosthesis, implanted with identical protocol by 1 surgeon in 1 hospital from 2006 to 2014. Friction pair was ceramic (Biolox Forte or Delta) in 35 patients of 53.7+/−10.6 years (25–69) (21 males, 60%), and CrCo-XLPE in 65 cases of 69.0+/−8.9 years (42–81) (36 males, 55%); there were significant differences in age (p<0.00001) but not in sex (p=0.6565). Head diameter: Ce-Ce with 19 of 28mm, 9 of 32 and 7 of 36mm; Me-PE with 63 of 28mm, 1 of 32 and 1 of 36. Follow-up averaged 10.5+/−3.1 years (1–15) in ceramic and 9.8+/−3.8 years (2–15) in XLPE group. Pearson, Fisher, Kolmogorov-Smirnov, Student, Mann-Whitney, calculated with the informatic tools Microsoft Excel 2007 and . https://www.socscistatistics.com/tests/. . Complications in ceramic joints: 2 late infections (Fisher exact test=0.6101) (1 DAIR, 1 one-stage exchange); 1 dislocation (Fisher exact test=0.2549) (closed reduction); 1 Vancouver C fracture (ORIF) (Fisher exact test=0.6548). Complications in Me-XLPE joints: 2 late infections (Fisher=0.6101) (1 DAIR, 1 two-stage exchange); 7 dislocations (Fisher=0.2549) (2 early, open reduction) (5 late: 3 closed reduction, 1 cup revision, 1 constrained cup); 4 Vancouver B fractures (Fisher=0.6548) (2 intraoperative, cerclages; 2 late, exchange). Final follow-up: Harris Hip Score averaged 93.2+/−13.7 (23–100) in ceramic and 94.3+/−8.7 (65–100) in XLPE joints (p=0.64552). Wear: 0.06+/−0.38mm (0–1.5) in ceramic and 0.16+/−0.5mm (0–2) in Me-PE THAs (p=0.30302). Osteolysis in Charnley-De Lee zones: 8 zones (6 patients) (17%) in ceramic cups, 25 zones (15 patients) (23%) in XLPE cups (p=0.980127). Survivorship without any surgery or closed reduction after 15 years: 91.0% in ceramic joints, 83.8% in Me-XLPE joints. Survivorship without component exchange after 15 years: 93.9% in ceramic joints, 93.6% in Me-XLPE joints. At least after 10 years follow-up of Furlong-HAP Active, metal-XLPE and ceramic-ceramic joints present no significant differences in complications, clinical score, wear, acetabular osteolysis, or survivorship without component exchange. On the contrary, survivorship without any surgery or closed reduction is different because of the high rate of dislocation in 28mm metal-poly joints


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 51 - 51
1 Jan 2018
de Steiger R Lorimer M Graves S
Full Access

Total Hip Arthroplasty (THA) is a successful operation for the management of end stage hip osteoarthritis (OA) but long term success is limited by wear of the polyethylene bearing surface. The aim of this study was to compare the rate of revision at 15 years in patients <55 who had a THA for OA, and received either cross-linked (XLPE) or conventional non cross-linked polyethylene (non-XLPE). The study population was all patients with primary THAs undertaken for OA from 1999 to 31 December 2016. Outcomes were determined for all procedures, comparing THA performed with non-XLPE and XLPE and including the effect of age, sex, and reason for revision. The principal outcome measure was time to first revision using Kaplan-Meier estimates of survivorship. There were 17,869 procedures recorded for younger patients <55 years of age undergoing THA for OA and using either non XLPE or XLPE. There was a fivefold increase in the rate of revision for procedures using non-XLPE after seven years. The 15 year cumulative percent revision of primary THA performed for OA in patients <55 with non XLPE was 17.4% (95% CI 15.5,19.5) and for XLPE was 6.6% (95%CI 5.5,7.8) HR >7 years =5.3, p<0.001. Non-XLPE and XLPE were combined with three different femoral head bearing surfaces: ceramic, metal and ceramicised metal. Within each bearing surface, XLPE had a lower rate of revision than non-XLPE. For the most common head size of 28mm XLPE had a lower rate of revision. The use of XLPE has resulted in a significant reduction in the rate of revision for younger patients undergoing THA for OA at 15 years. This evidence suggests that longevity of THA is likely to be improved and may enable younger patients to undergo surgery, confident of a reduced need for revision in the long term


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 37 - 37
1 Aug 2018
Baek S Lee J Lee YS Kim S
Full Access

We evaluated (1) wear rate, (2) prevalence and volume of osteolysis using 3D-CT scan, (3) other bearing-related complications, (4) HHS and survivorship free from revision at 15 years after THA using first-generation XLPE (1G XLPE). One-hundred sixty THAs were evaluated regarding bearing-related complication, HHS and survivorship. Among them, 112 hips underwent 3D-CT to analyze wear rate and osteolysis. All THAs were performed by single surgeon using cup of identical design, a 28-mm metal head and 1G XLPE (10 Mrad). Average age were 57 years and mean follow-up was 15.2 years. 3D-CT scan was performed at average of 13.0 years. Clinical evaluation included HHS and radiographic analysis was performed regarding stem alignment, cup anteversion and inclination angle, component stability, wear rate and osteolysis. Wear was measured using digital software. The prevalence and volume of osteolysis were also evaluated. Complications included XLPE dissociation/rim fracture, dislocation, periprosthetic fracture, infection, HO and any revision. Survivorship free from revision at 15 years was estimated. Average inclination and anteversion angle of cups were 40.7° and 20.6°. Mean stem alignment was 0.1° valgus. Average bedding-in and annual wear rate wear rate was 0.085 mm and 0.025 mm/yr. Eleven hips (10%) demonstrated osteolysis; pelvic osteolysis with average volume of 1.4 cm. 3. in six and femoral osteolysis with mean size of 0.4 cm. 2. in seven hips. Of 160 THAs, 5 hips (3%) dislocated. Overall, bearing-related complications occurred in 16 hips (10%). Other complications included postoperative periprosthetic fracture in 4 (3%), infection and HO in 3 hips, respectively. No hip demonstrated loosening, XLPE rim fracture/dissociation. Seven THAs (4%) were revised; recurrent dislocation in 5 and periprosthetic joint infection in 2 hips. Average HHS at last follow-up improved from 47.7 preoperatively to 91.2 points (p<0.001). Estimated survivorship free from revision at 15 years was 95.6 %. THA using 1G XLPE demonstrated low wear rate as well as low incidence of osteolysis at average follow-up of fifteen years. Longer-term studies will be necessary to determine if XLPE will continue to demonstrate this improved osteolysis characteristics


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 1 - 1
1 Nov 2021
Mallett K Trousdale R Sierra R Abdel M Berry D
Full Access

Previous work has demonstrated increased implant failure in patients with DDH compared to osteoarthritis with historic methods and implants. This study examines outcomes of modern total hip arthroplasty (THA) techniques using uncemented fixation and cross-linked PE (XLPE) bearings for DDH. A consecutive series of 879 patients with DDH who underwent primary THA with uncemented components and a XLPE bearing at a single institution between 1999 and 2016 were identified. Mean age at index arthroplasty was 51 years, with 78% females. Mean follow-up was 8 years. 5- and 10-year survivorships free of revision were 98.4% and 98%, respectively. 5- and 10-year survivorships free of reoperation for any reason were 97% and 96%, respectively. Survivorship free of acetabular revision for aseptic loosening was 99.8% at 5 and 10 years, while survivorships free of femoral revision for aseptic loosening were 99.7% at 5 years and 99.5% at 10 years. Survivorship free of reoperation for PE damage (2 liner fractures, 2 rim damage from impingement) was 99.3% at 10 years. There were no revisions for bearing surface wear or osteolysis. 13% of patients experienced complications (4% dislocation, 3.3% wound complication rate). Ten-year survivorship free of reoperation for instability was 99.2%. 8 patients developed infection requiring operation (<1%). 100 patients had a prior pelvic osteotomy (11%), which did not increase rate of complications (p=0.22) or reoperations (p=0.51). Fixation with modern uncemented implants has dramatically reduced implant loosening in patients with DDH, and the use of XLPE bearings has markedly reduced revision for PE wear/osteolysis in this young patient population, leading to dramatically improved mid/long-term survivorship compared to historic series


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 38 - 38
1 Aug 2018
Harris W
Full Access

Widespread use of XLPE has reduced the incidence of both revision surgery and dislocations. This paper aims to create gross estimates of the magnitude of the resulting cost savings. Data about decreasing rates of revision surgery and dislocations after THA, comparing XLPE versus CPE, were obtained from the literature along with figures for costs. Gross estimates were generated from these figures. AOA NJRR 17 reports that at 15 years XLPE reduced the “all cause” revision rate of ceramic on polyethylene by 6.8% and at 16 years reduced the rate for metal on polyethylene by 6.5%. Their average 15 year figure was 4.8%, nearly in half. Dislocations were reduced by 24%. Other data substantiate these trends. Inclusive costs of nonseptic revisions in US dollars, incorporating those relevant costs for the year prior to and the year following surgery, have been shown to average in the neighborhood of $55,000. Dislocations add further to the costs. The estimated savings from XLPE by 15 years on those total hip replacements done in one year in North America equal nearly $1 billion, even without incorporating any increase annually in the number done. While the specific savings in other countries with lower costs are less, similar proportions likely obtain. Despite all the assumptions, the magnitude is striking. In addition to major benefits to the patients, the surgeons, and the hospitals, XLPE affords a massive advantage economically


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 105-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 20 - 20
7 Jun 2023
Navacchia A Pagkalos J Davis E
Full Access

We have previously reported on the improved all-cause revision and improved revision for instability risk in lipped liner THAs using the NJR dataset. These findings corroborate studies from the Australian (AOANJRR) and New Zealand (NZOA) joint registries. The optimal orientation of the lip in THAs utilising a lipped liner remains unclear to many surgeons. The aim of this study was to identify impingement-free optimal liner orientations whilst considering femoral stem version, cup inclination and cup version. A cementless THA kinematic model was developed using a 20 degree XLPE liner. Physiological ROM and provocative dislocation manoeuvre analyses were performed. A total of 9 cup positions were analysed (inclination 30–40–50 degrees, anteversion 5-15-25 degrees) and combined with 3 stem positions (anteversion 0-15-30 degrees) and 5 lip orientations (right hip 11 to 7 o'clock). Some lip orientation/component position combinations lead to impingement within the physiological ROM range. Using a lipped liner increases the femoral head travel distance prior to dislocation when impingement occurs in the plane of the lip. In THAs with a cup inclination of 30 and 40 degrees, inferior lip orientations (7–8 o'clock for a right hip) performed best. Superior lip orientation performed best with a cup inclination of 50 degrees. Femoral stem version has a significant effect on the range of movement prior to impingement and hence the preferred lip orientation. The optimal orientation of the lip in lipped liner THA is dependent on the position of both the acetabular and femoral components. In the common component orientation combination of stem anteversion 15, cup inclination 40 and cup anteversion 15, the optimal lip orientation was postero-inferiorly (8 o'clock for a right hip). Preventing impingement during physiological ROM is possible with appropriate lip liner orientation


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_13 | Pages 16 - 16
1 Oct 2018
Harris WH Muratoglu OK
Full Access

Introduction. Periprosthetic osteolysis (PPO) gradually became the single dominant late failure mechanism of total hip replacements. It afflicted 1 million patients worldwide, leading to countless, difficult revision operations. The widespread adoption of highly cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE) drastically reduced that disease. But going beyond that remarkable reversal, two further substantial consequences have resulted: A) a major reduction in revision operations and B) a major reduction in aggregate costs of total replacement surgery. This paper assembles data on the decrease in revision rates and uses them to estimate the massive reduction in total hip surgery costs. Methods. Review the literature produced registry data and controlled studies data establishing that XLPE reduced the “all cause” revision rate over the first 15 years of follow-up of total hip replacements at least in half, and often more. A conservative estimate of the number of revisions annually in the United States is 50,000. A conservative estimate of the average, integrated cost for a THR revision in the United States is $50,000, meaning that the costs of these revisions annually is at least $2.5 billion. Using a very conservative figure of just 40% for the percent reduction in revision surgery resulting from the use of XLPE reduces this burden by at least $1 billion annually. Conclusion. In addition to the remarkable benefits to patients from XLPE, the resulting dramatic reduction in revision rate provides a remarkable reduction in aggregate costs


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 98-B, Issue 1 | Pages 28 - 32
1 Jan 2016
Hanna SA Somerville L McCalden RW Naudie DD MacDonald SJ

Aims. The purpose of this study was to compare the long-term results of primary total hip arthroplasty (THA) in young patients using either a conventional (CPE) or a highly cross-linked (HXLPE) polyethylene liner in terms of functional outcome, incidence of osteolysis, radiological wear and rate of revision. Methods. We included all patients between the ages of 45 and 65 years who, between January 2000 and December 2001, had undergone a primary THA for osteoarthritis at our hospital using a CPE or HXLPE acetabular liner and a 28 mm cobalt-chrome femoral head. . From a total of 160 patients, 158 (177 hips) were available for review (CPE 89; XLPE 88). The mean age, body mass index (BMI) and follow-up in each group were: CPE: 56.8 years (46 to 65); 30.7 kg/m. 2. (19 to 58); 13.2 years (2.1 to 14.7) and HXLPE: 55.6 years (45 to 65); BMI: 30 kg/m. 2. (18 to 51); 13.1 years (5.7 to 14.4). Results. The mean Harris hip score (HHS) at final follow-up was 89.3 for the CPE group and 90.9 for the HXLPE group (p = 0.078). Osteolysis was present around 15 acetabular (17%) and 16 femoral (18%) components in the CPE hips compared with none (0%) in the HXLPE hips. The mean radiological linear wear of the CPE liners was 0.11 mm/year compared with 0.035 mm/year for the HXLPE liners (p = 0.006). The cumulative implant survival, with revision for polyethylene wear as the endpoint, was 86% (95% confidence interval 78 to 94) in the CPE group and 100% in the HXLPE group at 13 years (numbers at risk at 13 years - CPE: 65, XLPE: 61). Discussion. This study shows that HXLPE liners are associated with significantly less osteolysis and a lower rate of revision THA than CPE liners at long-term follow-up. Take home message: The findings of this study highlight the clinical benefits of using HXLPE liners in THA and support the routine use of the material in order to improve implant longevity and to decrease the number of patients needing revision for aseptic osteolysis. . Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2016;98-B:28–32