Hip resurfacing with metal-on-metal in patients with osteonecrosis (ON) raises concerns of early failure. This study addresses the hypothesis that osteonecrosis as a pre-operative diagnosis significantly increases the risk of failure following hip resurfacing. We analyzed data of 202 hips that underwent metal-on-metal hip resurfacing. In group 1 were 101 hips with a pre-operative diagnosis of osteonecrosis. In group 2 were 101 hips with other pre-operative diagnosis of osteoarthritis. Survival analysis with Cox regression was used to compare the revision risks of both groups. The mean age at operation was 42 years in osteonecrotic and 43 years in osteoarthritic group. The preoperative and postoperative hip scores were 62 and 96 for osteonecrotic group and 58 and 95 for osteoarthritic group, respectively. Survival analysis with revision for any reason as the endpoint was performed on the two groups which had identical follow-up periods. Survival at 10 years was 97.7% for osteonecrosis and 95.0% for osteoarthritis. The revision risk for patients with osteonecrosis was lower (0.37, 95% CI 0.07 – 1.82, Cox regression) but the difference was not significant (p = 0.19). Our study found no difference in revision risk in patients with osteonecrosis as compared to those with osteoarthritis
Between January 2000 and December 2007, 31 patients 90 years of age or older underwent total hip replacement at our hospital. Their data were collected prospectively. The rate of major medical complications was 9%. The surgical re-operation rate was 3%. The requirement for blood transfusion was 71% which was much higher than for younger patients. The 30-day, one-year and current mortality figures were 6.4% (2 of 31), 9.6% (3 of 31) and 55% (17 of 31), respectively, with a mean follow-up for the 14 surviving patients of six years. Cox’s regression analysis revealed no significant independent predictors of mortality. Only 52% of patients returned immediately to their normal abode, with 45% requiring a prolonged period of rehabilitation. This is the first series to assess survival five years after total hip replacement for patients in their 90th year and beyond. Hip replacement in the extreme elderly should not be discounted on the grounds of age alone, although the complication rate exceeds that for younger patients. It can be anticipated that almost half of the patients will survive five years after surgery.
We observed similar effect in individual domains of pain, mobility and range of motion. Survival of the implant at nine years with revision due to any reason was 93.5%. We observed a significant difference in survival of procedures done by pioneer surgeons and by non pioneering surgeons (p <
0.01) (log rank test). There were 119 complications of which there were 30 fractures, 21 occurring within the first six months of operation.
The incidence of cancer needs to be interpreted with caution and can only be ascertained by a prospective study.