Over time, the locking mechanism of Modular Universal Tumour and Revision System (MUTARS) knee arthroplasties changed from polyethylene (PE) to polyether-ether-ketone Optima (PEEK) and metal-on-metal (MoM) in an attempt to reduce the risk of mechanical failure. In this study, we aimed to assess the cumulative incidence of locking mechanism revision for symptomatic instability by type of material, and assess potential associated risk factors. The MUTARS Orthopaedic Registry Europe was used for a retrospective review of 316 patients (54% male (n = 170), median age 44 years (IQR 23 to 61)) who underwent a MUTARS knee arthroplasty for oncological indications between December 1995 and January 2023. The minimum follow-up was 12 months, and the median follow-up was 7.9 years (IQR 3.3 to 13.0). A competing risk model was used to estimate the cumulative incidence of first locking mechanism revision with death and revision for any other reason as competing events. Possible risk factors were assessed employing a univariate cause-specific hazards regression model.Aims
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Proximal femoral endoprosthetic replacements (PFEPRs) are the most common reconstruction option for osseous defects following primary and metastatic tumour resection. This study aimed to compare the rate of implant failure between PFEPRs with monopolar and bipolar hemiarthroplasties and acetabular arthroplasties, and determine the optimum articulation for revision PFEPRs. This is a retrospective review of 233 patients who underwent PFEPR. The mean age was 54.7 years (SD 18.2), and 99 (42.5%) were male. There were 90 patients with primary bone tumours (38.6%), 122 with metastatic bone disease (52.4%), and 21 with haematological malignancy (9.0%). A total of 128 patients had monopolar (54.9%), 74 had bipolar hemiarthroplasty heads (31.8%), and 31 underwent acetabular arthroplasty (13.3%).Aims
Methods