5/4/2015 Ceramic Bearings Should Be Routinely Used in THA Gwo-Chin Lee, MD Assistant Professor University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, PA USA University of Pennsylvania Department of Orthopaedic Surgery Disclosures • Consultant – Stryker – Depuy • Educational Honoraria – Depuy – Ceramtec – Medtronic • Research Support – Zimmer – Smith and Nephew – NIH – CD Diagnostics – Cempra Pharmaceuticals 1 5/4/2015 Newer Polyethylene • Forgiving • Reliable • No wear (?) Good Enough ! The Posterior Approach The Historical Concerns • Most common reasons for revision: – Instability/Dislocation : 22.5% – Mechanical Loosening: 19.7% – Infection: 14.8% TREND TOWARDS USING LARGE HEADS JBJS-A 2003 2 5/4/2015 Volumetric Wear ? Do we have the tools to measure wear? University of Pennsylvania Department of Orthopaedic Surgery Osteolysis Threshold 0.1 mm/yr (Dumbleton JH, J Arthroplasty 2002) Negative Wear? 3 5/4/2015 SMALL OSTEOLYTIC LESIONS (1CM) VISIBLE Today’s Patients • Younger • More Active • Obese • Life expectancy will increase 4 5/4/2015 The Problem: Wear and Osteolysis 40 YO Female 7 years s/p THA We Can Do Better Ceramics University of Pennsylvania Department of Orthopaedic Surgery Resurgence of Ceramics • Appetite for larger heads • Increased number of head sizes, options, and reliability • Trunionosis 5 5/4/2015 Wear characteristics are important Bragdon et al. 2006, Greenwald et al. 2006, Manning et al. 2005, Martell et al. 2003, Zichner et al. 1992, 1977 Hydrophilic Wetting of alumina ceramic (left) and metal (right) ball heads. The smaller the wetting angle the better the lubrication. Garino, JBJS, 2001 INERT AND BIOCOMPATIBLE 6 5/4/2015 Author Journal Year F/U Hips Survivorship Boyer Orthop Traumatol Surg Res 2010 10.0y 83 92% Capello J Arthroplasty 2008 10.0y 380 95.9% Mesko J Arthroplasty 2011 8.3y 325 96.8% Kim Int Orthop 2010 11.1y 93 100% Sugano J Arthroplasty 2011 14.0y 100 97.9% Solarino J Orthop Traumatol 2012 13.0y 68 97% Aldrian Silke Hip Internat 2009 7.6y 229 98.2% Lewis J Arthroplasty 2010 8.1y 56 100% Chevillotte Int Orthop 2010 8.8y 100 96% Park Orthopedics 2010 9.6y 112 95% Kress Int Orthop 2011 10.5y 75 99% Yeung JBJS-A 2012 10.9 301 98% D’Antonio CORR 2012 10.1y 216 97.9%/95.2% 99% @ Mean 14.6 Years Follow Up 7 5/4/2015 Clinically Relevant Durability Harris Hip Scores 100 80 60 40 20 0 Pre-op 5 years 10 years 12.5 years Lee GC et al. Seminars in Arthroplasty 2014 COC vs MOP Author Year F/U COC MOP Capello 2008 8.5y 95.9% 91.3% Mesko 2011 10y 96.8% 92.1% Yoon 2008 17y 81% 74.4% D’Antonio 2012 10 97.9% 91.3% Less Osteolysis and Less Measurable Wear 8 5/4/2015 Why not ceramics in everyone? • Fewer options • Risk of fracture • Risk of squeaking • Less forgiving • Cost Author Year Hips Fractures Rate Squeaking Boyer 2010 83 1 liner 1.2% 1 (1.2%) Capello 2008 380 2 liners 0.5% 3 (0.8%) Mesko 2011 325 2 liners 1 head 0.9% 9 (2.7%) Kim 2010 93 0 0% 2 (2%) Sugano 2011 100 1 liner 1% 0 (0%) Solarino 2012 68 0 0% NR Aldrian Silke 2009 229 3 heads (extra long necks) 1.3% NR Lewis 2010 56 0 0% 0 (0%) Chevillotte 2010 100 0 0% 6 (6%) Park 2010 112 2 liners 1.7% 0 (0%) Kress 2011 75 0 0% NR Yeung 2012 301 0 0% 1 (0.3%) D’Antonio 2012 216 1 0.4% 2 (1%) 14 out of 2138 (0.6%) 9 5/4/2015 Incidence of Modern Alumina Ceramic and Alumina Matrix Composite Femoral Head Failures in Over 5.7 Million THA Gwo-Chin Lee, MD(1)(2-Ceramtec, 3B-Stryker, Depuy) and Raymond H. Kim, MD(2)(2-Ceramtec, Convatec, 3B-Stryker) 1- University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United States; 2- Colorado Joint Replacement, Denver CO Mating Surfaces (Forte ) Introduction Ball head size greater than 28mm were significantly less likely to fracture compared to 28 mm ceramic ball heads (p<0.001) While conventional total hip arthroplasty (MOP) have been shown to be durable and reliable, concerns remain. Improved wear properties, increased head and neck options, and concerns with trunionosis have led to an increasing utilization of ceramic ball heads (1). Concerns of ceramic fractures and increased implant costs remain the principal barriers to wide adoption of ceramics (2). ) Mating Surfaces (Delta) Objectives Taper Influence Short taper 28mm ball head was more likely to fracture compared to other neck lengths (p<0.01). The purpose of this study is to evaluate the risk of ceramic ball head fracture through analysis of the quality control program of a major ceramic implant manufacturer. Taper mismatch at the root of significant number of delta ball head fractures (over 50%). Goals: 1) Determine the fracture rate of modern 3rd and 4th generation alumina and alumina matrix composite ball heads 2) Determine the factors (timing, ball head size, and taper influence) on ceramic ball head fractures Taper contamination also common in forte ball head fractures (over 50%). Discussion Manufacturer reported rates of fracture are lower compared to reported clinical fracture rates (2,3). Massin et al. reported 3rd generation alumina fracture rates of 0.18% compared to 0.0013% for 4th generation alumina composite ball heads (3) Materials and Methods Ceramtec (Plochingen, Germany) Reporting and Surveillance Program (1/1/2000-12/31/2013) The reported fracture rate of ceramic ball heads have decreased over time 3.2 million pure alumina (Biolox forte) 2.52 million alumina matrix composite balls (Biolox delta) 0.100% BIOL… Fr Analysis of reported failures with respect to time to failure, head size and other factors Reporting of ceramic component failures to Ceramtec by orthopaedic implant manufacturers mandated through contracts. Destructive analysis of retrieved implants including scanning electron microscopy (SEM) when permitted. Evaluation for taper compatibility, metal transfer, fracture crack propagation, and taper contamination. Results Fourth generation alumina matrix composite ceramic ball heads were more reliable compared to 3 rd generation pure alumina ball heads 672 Biolox forte fractures (0.021%) 1 in 5000 26 Biolox delta fractures (0.001%) 1 in 100,000 Limitations Reliability of reporting Numerator is unknown Look at the trends Small delta sample size Underpowered 0.000% 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Reliability of Reporting Many factors leading to ceramic ball head fractures such as taper compatibility and contamination are under a surgeon’s control. No surgical and clinical data No clinical correlation. Summary Alumina matrix composite ball heads are more reliable compared to pure alumina ball heads. Fractures typically occur early during the implant’s life of service Larger ball heads have lower risk for fractures. Taper mismatch and contamination greatly influence the reliability of ceramic ball head components. References 1. Lehil MS, Bozic KJ. Trends in total hip arthroplasty implant utilization in the United States. J Arthroplasty 2014; 29(10): 1915-1918. 2. Fritsch EW, Gleitz M. Ceramic femoral head fractures in total hip arthroplasty. Clin Orthop Relat Res 1996; 328: 129-136. 3. Massin P, Lopes R, Masson B, et al. Does Biolox Delta reduce the rate of component fractures in total hip replacement? Orthop Traumatol Surg Res 2014; 100(6S):S317-S321. Wear, Big Heads, Trunionosis 10 5/4/2015 Concessions • Hard bearings are less forgiving – Technically demanding – Component position critical – Liner insertion (chipping) Choices and Decisions • Patient specific • Clinically sound • Economically responsible STANDARD: A level of quality or achievement that is considered desirable 11 5/4/2015 Ceramics Today • Better wear • More reliable • More options – Larger heads without concerns of wear Summary • Recognition that there is a role and place for ceramic on ceramic hips in younger and active individuals. • Ceramics has the lowest wear rates. • Reliability of ceramics continually improving. • Modern ceramic on ceramic THA have excellent clinical track record with low rates of complications. Thank You University of Pennsylvania Department of Orthopaedic Surgery 12 Ceramic Bearings Should be Routinely used in THA (Con) Thomas P. Schmalzried, M.D. Joint Replacement Institute at St. Vincent Medical Center Los Angeles, CA Harbor-UCLA Orthopaedics Disclosure Royalties received (DePuy) No royalties for any bearing Challenges for COC Overview • Recognized low COC wear • Metrics: – – – – Survivorship Function Special Risks Cost • XLPE at 15 years – Relative benefits and risks Challenges for COC 2014 AOA NJR Survival of COC < XLPE Challenges for COC COC patient Function • Comparable function • Bearing surface material is not determinant of hip function Paris Marathon Challenges for COC Squeaking • Sexton et al. 2011 – Younger patients – Higher range of post-op. IR and ER – Higher activity levels – Position sensitive • High acetabular inclination • High femoral offset • Lateralization of the hip center • High or low acetabular component anteversion Challenges for COC Overview Fractured COC Challenges for COC Revision for Fractured Ceramic • • • • • Low survivorship Residual ceramic particles Hard 3rd bodies Accelerated wear Osteolysis XLPE: 13 yrs, 37 Million Cycles ‒ 28, 32mm diam. mean linear penetration at min. 10 years 0.034 mm/yr +0.041 (-0.041-0.88) − Mean volumetric wear 11.9mm3/year +13.62 (range -11.75 – 33.95) − Max. linear penetration 0.87mm − Max. volumetric wear = 435 mm3 No radiographic osteolysis Decreasing Activity and Wear with Patient Aging The Osteolysis Threshold ‒ Max. linear penetration = 0.87mm ‒ Max. volumetric wear = 435 mm3 ‒ No osteolysis observed in these hips ‒ Dowd et al. JBJS 2000 • 32mm hips: No osteolysis at 10 yrs with linear wear rate <0.1mm/yr • Corresponds to ~650mm3 volumetric wear Decreasing Activity and Wear with Patient Aging Predicting Wear Osteolysis Threshold Volumetric Wear (mm3) ‒ The First Five Years Mean volumetric wear rate = 15mm3/yr ‒ 40% mean decrease in wear from First 5 to 5-13 years ‒ Approximately a 3% compounded decrease in wear per year ‒ Life Expectancy for 50 yr old = 31.0 yrs ‒ Total volumetric wear over 31yrs = 305mm3 ‒ Low risk of osteolysis during lifetime Wear Projection 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 Years Post-op XLPE at 15 Years • Bragdon et al. 2012 – Low wear – No osteolysis – Lower wear with time • Lachiewicz et al. 2015 – Low wear – Small osteolysis in 12 hips (14%) – No association with head size or volumetric wear rate Challenges for COC Summary • Recognized low COC wear, BUT ‒ Survivorship is not better ‒ Function is not better ‒ Squeaking risk in “target” patients ‒ Fracture risk + low revision survival ‒ AND it costs more • Relative benefits and risks favor XLPE Indications for Ceramicised Metal Bearings in THR R.W. McCalden Associate Professor University of Western Ontario London Health Sciences Centre London, Ontario, CANADA Disclosures: • Consultant for Smith & Nephew • Institution receives research support from Smith & Nephew, J&J Depuy and Stryker What are the issues with THR in 2015 ? • Fixation?? • Surgical Approach?? • Component Design?? • Wear Bearing Surfaces!!! • Trunnionosis!!! Options To Hip Wear • Change Poly (XLPE) ✔ • Change counterface • Eliminate poly Ceramic ✔ OxZr ✔ ✔ Ceramic-on-Ceramic ✔ Metal-on-Metal Except RSA Choosing A Bearing In THA What do I think about in a young active patient? • Bearing Longevity/Osteolysis Potential Low taper corrosion potential? • Which is best? Using XLPE is an Easy Choice Average Head Penetration Rate from 2 Year 0.4 CONVENTIONAL XLPE Conventional y = 0.0507x + 0.0921 Penetration (mm) y = 0.0507x + 0.0921 0.3 Significant Difference (p<0.05) y = 0.0068x + 0.1795 0.2 XLPE y = 0.0068x + 0.1795 0.1 0 0 1 2 3 Follow (years) 4 5 6 Australian Registry 2014… So far, HXLPE is a good thing!!! Gold Standard Polyethylene Polyethylene Wear Related To Polyethylene Used (XLPE better) AND Counterface What are the options as a counterface for XLPE • CoCr • Ceramic • Oxidized Zirconium (OxZr) What about CoCr heads? • long history with THR • most data with XLPE - excellent results to date • inexpensive • not scratch resistant • potential for taper corrosion • ‘”standard” to compare against Oxidized Zirconium(OxZr) – What is it? • Zirconium metal component is heated in air • Surface transforms to ceramic; not a coating • Ceramic oxide is about 5 microns thick Air 500oC Oxygen Diffusion Original Surface Ceramic Oxide Oxygen Enriched Metal Metal Substrate Biocompatibility • Zirconium: one of most biocompatible metals • Ranked on passivation and biological response • Other four: niobium, titanium, tantalum, platinum • Zr-2.5Nb: metal alloy with niobium and oxygen IV B VB 22 47.90 Ti Titanium 4.5 3130 1812 (Ar) 3d2 4s2 50.94 V Vanadium 5.96 3530 1730 (Ar) 3d3 4s2 40 41 91.22 Zr Zirconium 6.4 3580 1852 (Kr) 4d2 5s2 23 92.91 Nb Niobium 8.4 3300 1950 (Kr) 4d4 5s *Kovacs and Davidson, ASTM STP 1272 Patients With Metal Allergies • 3-8% • No Nickel In Oxidized Zirconium 45 million cycle hip simulator wear test *Parikh et al., ORS 2013:1028 45 million cycle hip simulator wear test *Parikh et al., ORS 2013:1028 45 million cycle hip simulator wear test *Parikh et al., ORS 2013:1028 Effect Of Roughened Heads On HXLPE • Scratch Resistant Counterface Preferrable • Oxidized Zirconium Metal • Ceramic Maximizing hip bearing survivorship Abrasion Resistance OxZr resists scratching and maintains low wear conditions simulating in-vivo roughening from retrieved heads Comparison of CoCr/CPE, OxZr/XLPE and Delta/XLPE simulator wear ~98% In Vitro evidence for OxZr is compelling…. What is the clinical evidence? Low clinical wear rates in hips* 400 patients 32 mm heads Martell method 3.7 yr median F/U 98% survivorship for all groups Penetration rates calculated relative to 1 yr radiographs *Jassim et al., ISTA, 2012:136 What is the best source of quality data about Bearing surfaces? Australian Registry 2014 - Large numbers - Comparable implants to North America Australian Registry 2014: OxZr/XLPE lowest Revision rate at 10 yrs OxZr against XLPE Australian Registry 2014: OxZr/XLPE lowest Revision rate at 10 yrs Any downside to hard bearings? Hard Bearings (Ceramic & OxZr) can be damaged… Damaged Ox head RWM Damaged ceramic head RWM How does this happen? • Contact of femoral head against the edge of acetabular shell… Care with final reduction! What about Trunnionosis…. How does OxZr technology help? Biocompatibility Key Factor in Trunnionosis • Choice of head is critical to reduce taper corrosion Biocompatibility: Trunnionosis CoCr OxZr Ti6Al4V Ti6Al4V Less Taper corrosion after long term wear test with Oxinium heads (45 mCycles) Retrieved OxZr heads show least chemical activity on the taper surface OxZr CoCrMo Ti transfer Cartner et al ORS 2014 Advantages of Ceramic heads against XLPE • lower wear than CoCr • scratch resistant • reduced taper corrosion/fretting Disdvantages of Ceramic heads against XLPE • expensive • fracture potential • limited modularity • surface damage & metal transfer • phase transformation possible Advantages of OxZr heads against XLPE • • • • • • • lower wear than CoCr - similar to ceramic scratch resistant fracture resistant maintains modularity reduced taper corrosion/fretting stable monoclinic phase excellent clinical results at 10 years Disdvantages of OxZr heads against XLPE • expensive • surface damage and/or metal transfer Indications for Ceramicised Metal Bearings in THR: • excellent bearing choice for young active patients excellent in-vitro & in-vivo wear profiles • ideal choice for ‘metal allergy’ patients • • very resistant to taper corrosion & fretting Indications for Ceramicised Metal Bearings in THR: OxZr - number of distinct advantages compared to ceramic heads - no risk of fracture - maintains modularity - stable ceramic phase - metal/ceramic - ‘Best of both worlds’ • OxZr/XLPE outstanding clinical results at 10 years • Other Indications for Ceramicised Metal Bearings in THR: • OxZr in the revision setting - fractured ceramic head - taper damaged & well-fixed stem - failed MOM THR (pseudotumour) - Rx of trunnionosis • Ideally, should be used with compatible taper (ie same manufacturer) OxZr/XLPE provides an excellent bearing couple for THR OxZr/XLPE OxZr/XLPE provides an excellent bearing couple for THR Thank You 5/4/2015 What we know About Trunions in 2015 Scott M. Sporer MD, MS Co-Medical Director, Cadence Health Joint Replacement Institute – Central DuPage Hospital Associate Professor Department of Orthopaedic Surgery RUSH University Medical Center 1 Financial Disclosure • Consultant: Zimmer, Smith & Nephew •Royalties: Smith & Nephew •Research Support: Zimmer, Cadence Health •Royalties: SLACK •Board: American Joint Replacement Registry 2 Modularity in THA • Benefits of Head-Neck Modularity: − Intra-operative flexibility − Ability to change head at later date − Decreased implant inventory • Early concerns after introduction in 1980’s-1990’s − Fretting and crevice corrosion 1 2 3 Collier, Clin Orthop 1991 Gilbert, JBMR 1993 Gilbert, JBJS(Am) 1994 • Design improvements minimized corrosion, leading to near-universal adoption 4 1 5/4/2015 Modularity in THA • “Dual-taper stems” − Allow the surgeon to independently control femoral fixation and hip-center restoration o Modular necks allow adjustment of leg length, offset, and version 5 All Good Things Come To An End !! 6 Study Population • 20 patients revised for ALTR secondary to corrosion between 1/2009 and 6/2012 Sex 16 women, 4 men Age 60.9 years (41 – 70) • All metal-on-poly bearings • 18 of 20 primary THA’s performed at our institution (2 referrals) Cooper, HJ et al. J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2012;94(18):1655-61. 7 2 5/4/2015 Study Population • Initial presentation 3.9 years (0.7 – 17.3) after index procedure • Presenting symptoms included: − pain (15) − swelling / fluid collections (4) − weakness (3) − recurrent instability (7) • Mean HHS score: 58.4 (22 – 79) 8 Study Population • Components Femur Taper Junction Acetabulum VerSys Beaded Fullcoat (14) 12/14 Co-Co Trilogy VerSys Epoch Fullcoat (1) 12/14 Co-Co Trilogy Zimmer Multilock (1) 6 deg Ti-Co HG-2 VerSys Fiber Metal Taper (1) 12/14 Ti-Co Trilogy M/L Taper w Kinectiv Modular Neck (1) 12/14 Ti-Co Trilogy AML Bantam (1) 10/12 Co-Co Trilogy Accolade (1) V40 Ti-Co Trident PSL • Head Sizes − 28mm (5) 36mm (5) 32mm (9) 40mm or larger (1) 9 Diagnostic Workup • 8 patients underwent cross-sectional imaging, each demonstrating large fluid collections around the hip 10 3 5/4/2015 Metal Levels • Elevated Co levels in all but one case • Elevated Cr levels in all but three cases • Serum Co levels were differentially elevated (p = 0.014, Wilcoxon signed-rank test) over serum Cr levels Ion Mean Co 10.27 Cr 2.16 ng/mL ng/mL Range Reference 1 0.13 – 49.83 (0.16 ± 0.10) 0.18 – 9.81 (0.24 ± 0.35) 1 Jacobs, ORS 2002 11 12 Serum Cobalt Levels 12.0 Preop 10.0 8.0 Serum Cobalt Ion Levels (ng/mL) 6.0 4.0 2.0 0.0 0 4 8 12 16 20 24 Months Post-Op 13 4 5/4/2015 Modular Neck Study Cooper, HJ et al. J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2013;95:865-72. • Multicenter, multi-surgeon series ▫ 11 patients (12 hips) revised for ALTR secondary to corrosion between 12/2010 and 6/2012 Sex 8 women, 3 men Age 60.1 years (43 – 77) • Bearing: Metal-on-Poly (4) Ceramic-on-Poly (8) • Single stem design (Rejuvenate) ▫ Titanium alloy (TMZF) stem ▫ Cobalt chromium alloy neck 14 Study Population • Initial presentation 7.9 months (5 – 13) after index procedure • Presenting symptoms included: − groin pain (11) buttock pain (5) − trochanteric pain (4) thigh pain (3) − limp / weakness (4) thigh swelling (1) • Mean HHS score: 43.2 (22 – 71) 15 Diagnostic Workup: MRI • 10 of 12 hips imaged with MARS MRI (Coronal STIR image) − Large fluid collections with hypertrophic soft tissue reactions in 9 of 10 patients − Images interpreted as normal in 1 patient 16 5 5/4/2015 Metal Levels • Obtained in 10 of 12 hips • Serum Co levels were differentially elevated over serum Cr levels Ion Mean Range Reference 1 Ti 3.41 ng/mL 1.56 – 5.80 4.13 (1.10 – 11.17) 0.8 x Co 5.99 ng/mL 3.89 – 9.48 0.32 (0.15 – 1.59) 18.7 x Cr 0.61 ng/mL 0.22 – 1.20 0.27 (0.02 – 1.46) 2.3 x Elevation 1 Jacobs, JBJS 1998 17 18 Etiology of ALTR • Related to summation of debris released from bearing surfaces and modular taper junctions through tribocorrosion mechanisms − ALTR only reported in association with modular junctions involving a CoCr alloy component − Have yet to be reported in association with Ti-Ti alloy junctions o Titanium necks are more susceptible to fracture • Potentially contributing factors from modularity: − − − − − − − Head size Taper geometry Material composition Extended offset neck Contamination of the taper interface (assembly issues) Design-related factors (manufacturer dependent) Alloy (TMZF) 20 6 5/4/2015 Synergistic Effects • Tribocorrosion (combined corrosion and wear) • Third Body Effects • Cathodic Polarization Effects (electrical connectivity between tribocorrosive processes at bearing surface and modular junctions) • Sum of metal debris burden from bearing surfaces (McKellop Mode 1 wear) and modular junctions (Mode 4 wear) 21 Relevance for MoM • Consider modular taper tribocorrosion as a cause/contributor to ALTR in patients with MoM bearings, particularly if Co is elevated out of proportion to Cr (Garbuz CORR [2010] 468:318-325). • Volumetric wear from tribocorrosion at modular connections can exceed that from the bearing surface (Langton et. al. Bone Joint Res [2012] 1:56–63). 22 Relevance for MoM • In modular acetabular components with metal on metal bearings simple acetabular liner exchange may not address the primary debris generator – the trunion should also be carefully assessed. 23 7 5/4/2015 Questions I Would Like To Know • Do Large Femoral Heads Make A Difference? • Does the Trunion Design Matter? • Are Taper debris particles more bioreactive than articular surface particles? • Should I be using a ceramic head on everyone? • Is there a threshold Cobalt and/or Chromium level to be concerned? • Do patients with Cobalt/Chrome heads need different surveillance? • Is Changing the head and liner adequate treatment? 24 Femoral Head Size • 69 Patients – Metal on Poly Cementless Hip 2009 • 43 Patients cobalt and chromium levels − 12 patients 28 mm, 18 patients 36 mm, 13 patients 40 mm • Increased Cobalt levels 36 mm • Normal Chromium levels Craig, P.; Bancroft, G.; Burton, A.; Collier, S.; Shaylor, P.; and Sinha, A.: Raised levels of metal ions in the blood in patients who have undergone uncemented metal-onpolyethylene Trident-Accolade total hip replacement. Bone Joint J, 96(1): 43-7. 25 Trunion Design • 40 retrieved MOM heads • Graded for fretting and corrosion • Head Diameter did not correlate with fretting • Trunion diameter and engagement length important • Head/Neck Corrosion correlated with soft tissue loss Nassif NA, Nawabi DH, Stoner K, Elpers M, Wright T, Padgett DE. Taper Design Affects Failure of Large-head Metal-on-metal Total Hip Replacements. Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2013 26 8 5/4/2015 Trunion Design • 161 failed MOM components − Head 128 − Stem 33 • Female taper noted to have ridges – “Imprinting” (Ridged microthread introduced to minimize burst of ceramic heads) • Corrosion primarily in area of imprinting • Corrosion and Imprinting scores related Hexter A, Panayiotidou A, Singh J, Skinner J, Hart A. Mechanism of corrosion in large diameter head metal-on-metal total hip arthroplasty: a retrieval analysis of 161 components. Bone Joint J. 2013:95–B Supp 12, 4. 27 Trunion vs. Articular Particles • 369 MOM bearings − Revised for ARMD − THA patients compared to Resurfacing • Resurfacing explants revised for ARMD higher volumetric wear than THA • Combined volumetric bearing + taper wear in THA revisions still less than resurfacing • Tissue destruction and extent of ALVAL greater in THA • Taper particles more bioreactive Langton D, Sidaginamale R, Lord J, Joyce T, Natu S, Nargol A. Metal debris release from taper junctions appears to have a greater clinical impact than debris released from metal on metal bearing surfaces. Bone Joint J. 2012:95–B Supp 1 1. 28 Clinical Questions • Should I be using a ceramic head on everyone? • Is there a threshold Cobalt and/or Chromium level to be concerned? • Do patients with Cobalt/Chrome heads need different surveillance? • Is Changing the head and liner adequate treatment? 29 9 5/4/2015 THANK YOU 30 10
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