header advert
Orthopaedic Proceedings Logo

Receive monthly Table of Contents alerts from Orthopaedic Proceedings

Comprehensive article alerts can be set up and managed through your account settings

View my account settings

Visit Orthopaedic Proceedings at:

Loading...

Loading...

Full Access

Research

R3 CUP DOES NOT HAVE A HIGH FAILURE RATE IN CONVENTIONAL BEARINGS: A MINIMUM OF FIVE YEARS' FOLLOW-UP

The European Orthopaedic Research Society (EORS) 25th Annual and Anniversary Meeting, Munich, Germany, September 2017. Part 1 of 2.



Abstract

Background

The R3 cementless acetabular system (Smith & Nephew, Memphis, Tennessee, United States) is a modular titanium shell with an asymmetric porous titanium powder coating. It supports cross-linked polyethylene, metal and ceramic liners with several options for the femoral head component. The R3 cup was first marketed in Australia and Europe in 2007. Two recent papers have shown high failure rates of the MoM R3 system with up to 24% (Dramis et al 2014, Hothi et al 2015). There are currently no medium term clinical papers on the R3 acetabular cup.

Objectives

The aim of the study is to review our results of the R3 acetabular cup with a minimum of 5 year follow up.

Study Design & Methods

Patients who were implanted with the R3 acetabular cup were identified from our centre”s arthroplasty database. Our centre started implanting the R3 acetabular cup in August 2009. For this study, we only included patients with a minimum of 5 year follow up (until June 2011). Over this time period, 293 consecutive THAs were performed in 286 patients, of which 7 were bilateral staged total hip arthroplasties. The primary outcome was revision. The secondary outcomes were the Oxford hip scores and radiographic evaluation.

Results

The mean age of the patients was 69.4 years (range 20–100 years). There were 117 males and 169 females in our series. The majority of the total hip arthroplasties in our series were cementless (n=283, 97%) and the rest were hybrid (n=10, 3%). The articulation bearings were as follows: ceramic on ceramic (n=167; 57%), Ceramic on Poly XLPE (n=97; 33%), Oxinium-Poly XLPE (n=19; 6.5%), stainless steel- Poly XLXE (n=10; 3.5%). The mean pre-operative Oxford Hip Score was 23 (range 10–34) and the mean Oxford Hip Score was 40 (range 33–48) at the final follow-up. Radiological evaluation showed an excellent ARA-score in all patients at five years. None of the R3 cups showed osteolysis at final follow up. There were 3 revisions in our series, of which two R3 cup were revised. The risk of revision was 0.28% at 5 years. Using Weibull analysis, it gives a 10-year estimate of 98.8% survival for the R3 cup (95%CI 95.0 to 99.6).

Conclusions

Our experience at a district general hospital using the R3 acetabular system with conventional bearings showed high survivorship and is consistent with the allocated Orthopaedic Data Evaluation Panel (ODEP) rating of 5A* as rated in 2015 in the United Kingdom.


Email: