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General Orthopaedics

Risk factors for early revision after shoulder arthroplasty: 7113 shoulder arthroplasties from the Australian Orthopaedic Association National Joint Replacement Registry

British Orthopaedic Association/Irish Orthopaedic Association Annual Congress (BOA/IOA)



Abstract

Aims

To report the rate of early revision (within two years) after shoulder arthroplasty and identify any patient, disease or prosthesis factors that may be associated with these early failures.

Methods

The AOA National Joint Replacement Registry has recorded 7113 shoulder arthroplasty procedures up to December 2009. Data recorded includes diagnosis, patient demographics and prosthesis details. The main outcome of this analysis was the time to first revision of all primary shoulder arthroplasty recorded by the Registry.

The cumulative per cent revision (CPR) of shoulder arthroplasty procedures was estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method. Cox proportional hazard models were used to test significance between groups

Results

The CPR (95% CI) at two years for all diagnosis was 5.2 (3.1, 8.7) for hemi-resurfacing arthroplasty, 4.0 (2.9, 5.6) for hemiarthroplasty, 4.1 (3.1, 5.3) for conventional total shoulder arthroplasty (TSA) and 4.0 (3.0, 5.2) for reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (reverse TSA). Neither patient age nor sex were shown to affect the rate of revision for conventional and reverse TSA performed for osteoarthritis. The use of an uncemented conventional TSR performed for osteoarthritis is associated with a higher rate of revision when compared with cemented TSR (HR 4.71 (1.43, 15.45)) and hybrid TSR using a cemented glenoid component (HR 2.48 (1.45, 4.24)). Both the Univers 3D conventional total shoulder replacement prosthesis (adjusted HR 3.8 (1.52, 9.50) p< 0.01) and the SMR/SMR reverse total shoulder replacement (adjusted HR 2.0 (1.15, 3.28) p=0.01) were prosthesis identified by the Registry as having a significantly higher rate of revision compared to all other prosthesis in the same class.

Conclusions

The Registry has identified an increased early rate of revision with the use of uncemented convention TSR. Two types of prosthesis were identified as having a higher than anticipated rate of revision compared to all other prosthesis in the same class.