Outcomes and prognostic factors in revision hip arthroplasty for severe intra-pelvic cup protrusion: 246 cases - 08/10/15
the French Hip and Knee Society (SFHG)g
Abstract |
Background |
The outcome of revision total hip arthroplasty (THA) for intra-pelvic cup protrusion is unclear. Hence, we conducted a large retrospective study to clarify the surgical strategy (hip lever arm and cup mechanical fixation) and the outcomes of reconstruction for severe intra-pelvic cup protrusion.
Hypothesis |
We hypothesized that restoration of the anatomic hip centre in such acetabular revisions decreased the risk of recurrent loosening.
Material and methods |
The study included 246 THA procedures (in 220 patients), with a follow-up of 5.2±4.9 years (1–24.2) after the index surgery. Bone loss was estimated using the SOFCOT classification (grade III or IV in 80% of cases) and the Paprosky classification (IIIA or IIIB in 58% of cases). Quality of the reconstruction was assessed on X-rays according to the correction of the protrusion and position of the hip centre of rotation.
Results |
After a clinical follow-up of at least 5 years, with a mean of 9.9±4.1 years (5–24 years), the mean Postel-Merle d’Aubigné score was 14.2±3.1 and the mean Harris Hip Score was 78.0±18.7. Cup protrusion was partially or completely corrected in every case and cup position was normal in 27 (11%) cases. The centre of rotation was within 10mm of the physiological position in 158 (64.2%) cases, acceptable in 77 (31.3%) cases, ascended in 9 (3.7%) cases, and worsened in 1 (0.4%) case. Revision for cup or cup and femoral failures was required in 24 (9.8%) cases. Cumulative survival rates with cup loosening as the endpoint were 88.5% after 5 years, 79.9% after 10 years, and 63.9% at last follow-up at 13.6 years.
Discussion |
Our hypothesis that restoration of anatomic hip centre decreased the risk of recurrent loosening was not verified: success or failure in restoring the normal centre of rotation did not correlate significantly with final cup status. Recurrent aseptic loosening was the cause of failure in 9.8% of cases. Ensuring long-term effective mechanical stability had a greater impact on global outcomes than restoring an ideal centre of rotation.
Level of evidence |
IV, retrospective study.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Total hip arthroplasty, Intra-pelvic migration, Acetabular protrusion, Centre of rotation, Vascular lesions, Neurological lesions
Plan
Vol 101 - N° 6S
P. S257-S263 - octobre 2015 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.