Systematic review of primary total hip arthroplasty using titanium-titanium modular-neck prostheses: the true risk of revision

Author:

Lex Johnathan R12ORCID,Welch Matthew D13,See Abbas1,Edwards Thomas C4ORCID,Stavropoulos Nikolaos A56,Babis George C5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Oxford Foundation School, Oxford, UK

2. Royal Orthopaedic Hospital, Birmingham, UK

3. Oxford University Clinical Academic Graduate School, Oxford, UK

4. MSk Lab, Imperial College London, London, UK

5. 2nd Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Konstantopouleio General Hospital, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens Medical School, Athens, Greece

6. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, General Hospital of Karpenissi, Karpenissi, Greece

Abstract

Aims: Modular-neck femoral implants are used to enable more variability in femoral neck version, offset and length. It has been reported that these implants carry a higher rate of revision. The aim of this review was to assess the overall and cause-specific revision rate of titanium-titanium alloy modular-neck implants in primary total hip arthroplasty (THA). Methods: A systematic review was conducted following PRISMA guidelines and utilising multiple databases. All results were screened for eligibility. Studies published from 2000 onwards, using a current-generation, titanium-titanium, modular-neck implant were included. Overall and cause-specific revision rates were analysed, comparing to fixed-neck prostheses where applicable. Results: 920 studies were screened. After applying exclusion criteria, 23 were assessed in full and 14 included. These consisted of 12 case series and 2 joint registry analyses. 21,841 patients underwent a modular-neck implant with a weighted mean follow-up of 5.7 years, mean age of 62.4 years, and average body mass index (BMI) of 28.4kg/m2. The overall revision rate was 3.95% and 2.98% for modular and fixed-neck prostheses, respectively. For studies with >5 years follow-up the mean revision rate was 3.08%. There was no difference in cause-specific revision rates by implant design. Mean improvement in Harris Hip Score was 41.9. Conclusions: At medium-term, revision rates for titanium-titanium primary modular-neck THA are acceptable. These prostheses are a sensible management option in patients with considerable anatomical hip deformity not amenable to correction with standard fixed-neck implants. Patients of male gender, high BMI and requiring prostheses with a larger neck, offset or head are at higher risk of implant failure.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Surgery

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