Cobalt-induced cardiomyopathy – do circulating cobalt levels matter?

Author:

Jenkinson Mark R. J.1,Meek R. M. Dominic2,Tate Rothwell3,MacMillan Sandy4,Grant M. Helen5,Currie Susan5

Affiliation:

1. University College London Hospitals, London, UK

2. Queen Elizabeth University Hospital, Glasgow, UK

3. Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK

4. University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK

5. Biomedical Engineering, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK

Abstract

Elevated levels of circulating cobalt ions have been linked with a wide range of systemic complications including neurological, endocrine, and cardiovascular symptoms. Case reports of patients with elevated blood cobalt ions have described significant cardiovascular complications including cardiomyopathy. However, correlation between the actual level of circulating cobalt and extent of cardiovascular injury has not previously been performed. This review examines evidence from the literature for a link between elevated blood cobalt levels secondary to metal-on-metal (MoM) hip arthroplasties and cardiomyopathy. Correlation between low, moderate, and high blood cobalt with cardiovascular complications has been considered. Elevated blood cobalt at levels over 250 µg/l have been shown to be a risk factor for developing systemic complications and published case reports document cardiomyopathy, cardiac transplantation, and death in patients with severely elevated blood cobalt ions. However, it is not clear that there is a hard cut-off value and cardiac dysfunction may occur at lower levels. Clinical and laboratory research has found conflicting evidence of cobalt-induced cardiomyopathy in patients with MoM hips. Further work needs to be done to clarify the link between severely elevated blood cobalt ions and cardiomyopathy. Cite this article: Bone Joint Res 2021;10(6):340–347.

Publisher

British Editorial Society of Bone & Joint Surgery

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Surgery

Reference73 articles.

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2. NJR. 16th annual report. 2019. National Joint Registry. reports.njrcentre.org.uk/portals/0/pdfdownloads/njr%2016th%20annual%20report%202019.pdf (date last accessed 7 April 2021).

3. NJR. National joint registry 14th annual report. 2017. National Joint Registry. www.hqip.org.uk/resource/national-joint-registry-14th-annual-report-2017/#.YGb3t7CSlPY (date last accessed 7 April 2021).

4. No authors listed. MHRA (2017) medical device alert: all metal-on-metal (mom) hip replacements: updated advice for follow-up of patients (MDA/2017/018). https://www.gov.uk/drug-device-alerts/all-metal-on-metal-mom-hip-replacements-updated-advice-for-follow-up-of-patients

5. Systemic toxicity related to metal hip prostheses

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