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

General Orthopaedics

Metal-on-Metal Resurfacing Arthroplasty: Minimum 12-Year Follow-Up of 1000 Consecutive Resurfacings

International Society for Technology in Arthroplasty (ISTA) 2012 Annual Congress



Abstract

Introduction

High early failure rates have been reported with certain metal-metal surface arthroplasties and good results have been reported with others. This is a minimum 10-year review of the first 1000 consecutive resurfacings including all ages and diagnoses from one centre.

Methods

The first 1000 surface arthroplasties (892 patients) were followed-up with postal questionnaires. Of these the first 402 hips (350 patients) were also invited for a clinico-radiological review. 54 patients (63 hips) died 6.7 years (0.7–12.6) later due to unrelated causes. Mean follow-up is 12.2 years (range 10.8–13.7). Radiographs were assessed independently by a senior musculoskeletal radiologist.

Results

There were 33 revisions at a mean of 7 years (0–11.6) following operation, 15 femoral failures (0.6%), 6 infections (1.5%) and 12 wear-related failures (1.2%) including 7 pseudotumours (0.7%). With revision for any reason as the end-point Kaplan-Meier survival analysis showed 97.5% survival at 10 years and 96.5% at 13 years. Single zone socket lucencies were found in 2.7% and 5.7% on the femoral side and two zone lucencies in 2.1% on the acetabular side only. No 3-zone lucencies or component migration were seen.

Discussion and Conclusion

Our study shows that the performance of modern metal-on-metal resurfacing arthroplasty continues to be good at 10 year follow-up. Even though the incidence of radiographic adverse features, wear-related failures and pseudotumours is low at this stage it continues to raise concern about long-term implications.