Outcomes Following Intraoperative Calcar Fractures During Cementless Total Hip Arthroplasty.

Eric J Wilson, Alexander V Strait, Kevin B Fricka, William G Hamilton, Robert A Sershon
Author Information
  1. Eric J Wilson: Anderson Orthopaedic Research Institute, Alexandria, Virginia.
  2. Alexander V Strait: Anderson Orthopaedic Research Institute, Alexandria, Virginia.
  3. Kevin B Fricka: Anderson Orthopaedic Research Institute, Alexandria, Virginia.
  4. William G Hamilton: Anderson Orthopaedic Research Institute, Alexandria, Virginia.
  5. Robert A Sershon: Anderson Orthopaedic Research Institute, Alexandria, Virginia.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Intraoperative calcar fractures (IOCFs) are an established complication of cementless total hip arthroplasty (THA). Prompt recognition and management may prevent subsequent postoperative complications. This study aimed to evaluate the outcomes and revision rates of THAs with IOCFs identified and managed intraoperatively.
METHODS: There were 11,438 primary cementless THAs performed at a single institution from 2009 to 2022. Prospectively collected data on cases with an IOCF was compared to cases without the complication. The fracture group had a lower body mass index (26.9 versus 28.9 kg/m; P = .01). Patient age, sex, and mean follow-up (3.2 (0 to 12.8) versus 3.5 years (0 to 14); P = .45) were similar between groups.
RESULTS: An IOCF occurred in 62 of 11,438 (0.54%) cases. The THAs done via a direct anterior approach experienced the lowest rate of fractures (31 of 7,505, 0.4%) compared to postero-lateral (27 of 3,759, 0.7%; P = .03) and lateral (4 of 165, 2.4%; P < .01) approaches. Of the IOCFs, 48 of 62 (77%) were managed with cerclage cabling, 4 of 62 (6.5%) with intraoperative stem design change and cabling, 4 of 62 (6.5%) with restricted weight-bearing, and 6 of 62 (9.7%) with no modification to the standard postoperative protocol. The IOCF group experienced one case of postoperative component subsidence. No subjects in the IOCF cohort required revision, and rates were similar between groups (0 of 62, 0% versus 215 of 11,376, 1.9%; P = .63). Postoperative Hip dysfunction and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score for Joint Replacement scores were comparable (85.7 versus 86.4; P = .80).
CONCLUSIONS: Cementless THA complicated by IOCF had similar postoperative revision rates and patient-reported outcome measures at early follow-up when compared to patients not experiencing this complication. Surgeons may use these data to provide postoperative counseling on expectations and outcomes following these rare intraoperative events.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Humans
Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip
Female
Male
Middle Aged
Aged
Reoperation
Intraoperative Complications
Treatment Outcome
Hip Prosthesis
Postoperative Complications
Retrospective Studies
Adult
Aged, 80 and over

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0062postoperativeIOCFP =versus4IOCFscomplicationcementlessrevisionratesTHAs11casescompared93similar6intraoperativeIntraoperativecalcarfracturestotalhiparthroplastyTHAmaycomplicationsoutcomesmanaged438datafracturegroup01follow-up2groupsexperienced74%7%cabling5%HipCementlessBACKGROUND:establishedPromptrecognitionmanagementpreventsubsequentstudyaimedevaluateidentifiedintraoperativelyMETHODS:primaryperformedsingleinstitution20092022Prospectivelycollectedwithoutlowerbodymassindex2628kg/mPatientagesexmean1285years1445RESULTS:occurred54%doneviadirectanteriorapproachlowestrate31505postero-lateral2775903lateral165P<approaches4877%cerclagestemdesignchangerestrictedweight-bearingmodificationstandardprotocolonecasecomponentsubsidencesubjectscohortrequired0%21537619%63PostoperativedysfunctionOsteoarthritisOutcomeScoreJointReplacementscorescomparable858680CONCLUSIONS:complicatedpatient-reportedoutcomemeasuresearlypatientsexperiencingSurgeonsuseprovidecounselingexpectationsfollowingrareeventsOutcomesFollowingCalcarFracturesTotalArthroplastyrevisions

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