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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_2 | Pages 90 - 90
1 Mar 2021
Mahatma M Jayasuriya R Gossiel F Gallagher O Hughes D Buckley S Gordon A Hamer A Tomouk M Wilkinson JM
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Abstract

Objective

In this phase 2 clinical trial (EudraCT 2011-000541-20) we examined the effect of denosumab versus placebo on osteolytic lesion activity in patients undergoing revision surgery after THA.

Methods

Men and women ≥ 30 years old scheduled for revision surgery for symptomatic, radiologically-confirmed osteolysis were randomised (1:1) to receive either denosumab 60mg or placebo subcutaneously eight weeks prior to operation. At surgery, biopsies from the osteolytic membrane-bone interface were taken for histomorphometric analysis of osteoclast number, the primary outcome measure. Secondary outcome measures included other static histomorphometric indices and systemic bone turnover markers. Adverse events and patient-reported clinical outcome scores were recorded as safety endpoints.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 35 - 35
1 Jun 2016
Petrie M Harrison T Buckley S Gordon A Kerry R Stockley I Tomouk M Wilkinson J Hamer A
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Background

An extended trochanteric osteotomy (ETO) is a widely used approach for revision hip arthroplasty. Following an ETO it is common practice to use a long stemmed femoral prosthesis at the second stage to bypass the osteotomy. We propose that at the second stage, if the osteotomy has united, it is appropriate to use a standard length prosthesis, which preserves bone stock for any future revisions.

Methods

We performed a retrospective review of our institution's prospective arthroplasty database, identifying all patients who had undergone an ETO at the first stage revision. A radiograph review was then performed and any subsequent complications recorded. A selection of patients radiographs were individually reviewed by three reviewers and intra-class correlation (ICC) was performed to assess intra-observer reliability.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 93-B, Issue SUPP_IV | Pages 545 - 545
1 Nov 2011
Jayasuriya R Buckley S Hamer A Kerry R Stockley I Tomouk M Wilkinson J
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In this 2-year randomised clinical trial we examined whether cemented femoral prosthesis geometry affects the pattern of strain-adaptive bone remodelling in the proximal femur after THA. 128 patients undergoing primary THA were randomised to receive a Charnley (shape-closed, no taper), Exeter (force-closed, double-tapered) or C-stem (forced-closed, triple-tapered) prosthesis. All received a cemented Charnley cup. Proximal femoral BMD change over 2 years was measured by DXA. Urine and serum samples were collected at pre-operative baseline and over 1 year post-operatively. N-telopeptides of type-I-collagen (NTX) was measured in urine as a marker of osteoclast activity and Osteocalcin (OC) in serum as a maker of osteoblast activity. Clinical outcome using the Harris and Oxford hip scores, and prosthesis migration measured using digitised radiographs (EBRA-Digital) were measured over 2 years. The baseline characteristics of the subjects in each group were similar (P> 0.05). Decreases in femoral BMD were observed over the first year for all prosthesis designs. Bone loss was greatest (14%) in the proximal medial femur (region 7). The pattern and amount of bone loss observed was similar between all prosthesis designs (P> 0.05). Transient rises in both osteoclast (NTX) and osteoblast (OC) activity also occurred over year 1, and were similar in pattern in the 3 prosthesis groups (p> 0.05). All prostheses showed migration patterns that were true to their design type and similar improvements in clinical hip scores were observed over the 2 year study. Differences in the proposed mechanism of load transfer between prosthesis and host bone in force-closed versus shape-closed femoral prosthesis designs in THA are not major determinants of prosthesis-related remodelling.