Press-fit acetabular reconstructions have become the standard THA; however, controversies remain. The purpose of this study was to critically evaluate serial radiographs for initial cup stability, i.e. gaps and signs of periacetabular interface changes for a porous tantalum monoblock socket. A multicenter study evaluating 574 primary THRs (542 patients) performed by 9 surgeons at 7 hospitals, all with a monoblock cup without screws. Analyses included clinical outcomes and detailed 2-year minimum radiographic evaluation by one independent observer (mean follow-up, 33 months). Complications included 9 intra-operative acetabular fractures. Among the 123 cases excluded from radiographic evaluations: deceased (19), lost-to-follow-up (8), 7 early revisions (recurrent dislocations (6) and one trauma-related loosening), and sepsis (3). Patient demographics (414 hips): mean age 65 years (19–93); 58 percent females. Baseline radiographs revealed 113 zones in 85 hips (21 percent) with acetabular gaps; 36 in zone I, 72 in zone II, and 5 in zone III. Of these radiolucencies, 57 zones were 1 mm or less and 56 zones ranged from 2 to 5 mm. At last follow-up, 64 hips (75 percent) had complete gap fill-in, including 100 percent of gaps greater than 3 mm. There were no socket migrations, no evidence of lysis, no revisions for loosening, and no complete periacetabular interface radiolucencies. The fill-in of preexisting OA cysts and gaps is attributed to adequate initial stability and osteointegration into the porous tantalum. These results suggest that a monoblock cup without screws is an attractive option in THA.
To review short to medium term results of a metalon-metal (M/M) hybrid surface arthroplasty (SA) for a young and active patient population. The first 300 hips (of 564) in 263 patients underwent M/M hybrid surface arthroplasty (cementless acetabular and cemented femoral components). Demographics: mean age 48.4; 75% males, 25% females; 141 Charnley Class A; 109 Class B and 13 Class C. Diagnosis at surgery: OA 67%, DDH 10.3%, ON 8.3%, Post-traumatic 6.7%, Inflammatory arthritis and Rheumatoid Disease 4%, SCFE and LCP 3.4%, Melorheostosis 0.3%. Mean follow-up 3.6 years (2.5–5.9). Average UCLA hip scores post-op: pain 9.4, walking 9.5, function 9.4 and activity 7.7. Average Harris Hip Score was 92.8. The SF-12 physical and mental components were respectively, 31.4 and 47.2 pre-op and 49.9 and 52.9 post-op. DEXA data suggests preservation or restoration of neck BMD. The experience with SA of all cemented metal/ UHMWPE bearing demonstrated failure rates of 15%–33% at 3 years. At longer follow-up, the preliminary experience is encouraging (3.6% failure rate) and eventual conversions to THR are facilitated with unipolar heads. The technique preserves femoral and ace-tabular bone, dislocation is rare, and acetabular fixation secure. Initial femoral fixation is critical as the fixation area is small, especially with osteopenia and cystic degeneration. The percent of potentially adverse radiographic changes was much greater in the first 100 cases, during the time of development of instrumentation, technique, and bearing optimisation.