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General Orthopaedics

CERAMIC HEADS SHOULD BE USED IN ALL PATIENTS – AFFIRMS

The Current Concepts in Joint Replacement (CCJR) Spring 2018 Meeting, Las Vegas, NV, USA, 20–23 May 2018.



Abstract

I believe ceramic-on-polyethylene should be used in all patients undergoing THA. I believe the issues that one must look at include wear and osteolysis, bearing fracture and in 2018 corrosion/adverse local tissue reaction (ALTR). If one looks at these aspects it is clear ceramic-on-polyethylene is the bearing of choice.

In the literature, there is a paucity of studies comparing metal-on-polyethylene with ceramic-on-polyethylene total hips. The data suggests no real difference in survivorship but less wear. However, most studies are not comparative studies and are underpowered to see these differences. The only data that is powered to see these differences is registry data. In first decade survivorship of metal-on- polyethylene is similar to ceramic-on-polyethylene. However, in the second decade the advantage is clearly with ceramic-on-polyethylene.

However, in 2018, the major issue is corrosion and subsequent ALTR. While corrosion at the femoral head and stem taper has been seen for many years, in 2012 an article by Cooper et al. highlighted that this corrosion may lead to ALTR. They reported on 10 cases with variable presentation and no specific factor was found in their study or any study to date that will lead to corrosion and ALTR. More recently, a study from our center highlighted that dislocation may be the first presentation of ALTR. In this study, 10 cases of dislocation presented at an mean of 8 months with their first dislocation. Components were well positioned and it was concluded that the ALTR was the cause for the dislocation. Today any patient with new onset pain, stiffness or instability with a metal-on-polyethylene THA should be worked up for ALTR.

The question of why this is happening now is important to answer. Numerous theories have been proposed, most likely it is a combination of these factors: change in trunnion dimension/surface, increasing head size, trunnion preparation and impaction force. It also appears to be stem dependent. In a study by McGrory et al. they found a 1% prevalence of ALTR in just over 1300 cases with one particular femoral stem.

At present, however, we cannot predict at all which patient will develop ALTR and therefore we have gone to ceramic-on-polyethylene in all our THAs.

In summary, the ideal bearing has low wear, low corrosion potential, generalizable, easy to revise, versatile, biocompatible and safe. In 2018, ceramic-on-polyethylene as a bearing fulfills all these criteria and should be the bearing of choice in total hip replacement.