DOI: 10.12809/hkmj175070
© Hong Kong Academy of Medicine. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
COMMENTARY
Commentary on the medium-term results of ceramic-on-polyethylene Zweymüller-Plus total hip arthroplasty
CH Yan, FRCSEd(Orth), FHKAM (Orthopaedic Surgery)
Department of Orthopaedics and Traumatology, The University of Hong Kong, Queen Mary Hospital, Pokfulam, Hong Kong
Corresponding author: Dr CH Yan (yanchoi@hku.hk)
In their retrospective review, Li et al1 have described
the medium-term clinical and radiological results
of Zweymüller-Plus total hip arthroplasty (THA)
in 185 Chinese patients (207 hips). The articulation
size was 28 mm, with conventional ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) over
the acetabular side and third-generation alumina
ceramics on the femoral side. Due to the number of
patients lost to follow-up and other reasons, the final
numbers of patients and hips available for analysis
were 156 and 175, respectively. The mean duration
of follow-up was 14.1 years. The series comprised
both primary and revision THA cases. One should
be aware of the complexity of the latter and that
their results may not be directly comparable with
the former. All the surgeries were performed before
the year 2000, when UHMWPE was still widely used
around the world.
The authors reported satisfactory clinical
outcomes.1 Two out of 175 hips were revised, making
the true revision rate of 1.1%, excluding those who
were lost to follow-up. Two hips were found to have
excessive polyethylene wear, although the authors
did not define ‘excessive’. Osteolysis or radiolucent
lines were detected in 4% of the femora and 1.7%
of the acetabula. There are three major limitations
in this study in terms of measuring polyethylene
wear and survival analysis. First, the method used
to measure UHMWPE liner wear in the study was
imprecise, as admitted by the authors. The modern
standard of measuring wear requires the use of
computer software based on the concentricity
of the hip ball and liner.2 Second, the authors
mentioned that their desired acetabular component
position was 45° ± 10° of abduction and 15° ± 10° of
anteversion. However, they did not reveal the mean
postoperative angles, although malpositioning of
the acetabular component is a known risk factor of
excessive polyethylene wear. Third, the high number
of patients lost to follow-up (13.5%) might have
underestimated the revision rate and overestimated
the overall survival of the prostheses.
Chiu et al3 reported the results of THA in
patients below 40 years of age and found UHMWPE
wear and osteolysis in 56% of the hips with 28-mm
metal on UHMWPE articulation. Of note, UHMWPE has inferior wear resistance and therefore generates
wear particles that induce osteolysis and cause
aseptic loosening in THA.4 5 6 7 8 Highly cross-linked
polyethylene (HXLPE) was introduced for clinical
use in THA in 1998, aiming to reduce wear and
improve its longevity.9 In-vitro9 10 11 12 13 and
in-vivo11 14 15 16 17 studies suggested that HXLPE had superior wear
resistance and caused less osteolysis. Li et al18
studied the linear penetration of HXLPE in young
Chinese patients with THA and found the wear rate
was 0.025 mm/year.
In their meta-analysis, Kurtz et al19 also
investigated the incidence of osteolysis in patients
with UHMWPE liners and HXLPE liners by
calculating odds ratios from individual cohort (n=8)
and randomised controlled trial (n=1) studies with
a minimum of 5-year follow-up. The combined and
the pooled odds ratio was estimated to be 0.131
(95% confidence interval [CI], 0.064-0.268) using
a random-effects model which indicates that the
incidence of osteolysis was 87% lower in patients
with HXLPE liners compared with patients with
conventional polyethylene liners.19 Hanna et al20 followed a cohort of 160 patients (179 THAs)
between the ages of 45 and 65 years who received
liners made of either UHMWPE (n=89) or HXLPE
(n=88). The cumulative implant survival, with
revision for polyethylene wear or osteolysis as
an endpoint, was 86% (95% CI, 78%-94%) in the
UHMWPE group and 100% in the HXLPE group
at 13 years postoperatively.20 Data from a United States
registry also suggested that the revision rates for
THAs utilising HXLPE are lower than that for non-crosslinked
UHMWPE. Paxton et al21 found that at
7 years of follow-up, the cumulative incidence of
revision was 5.4% (95% CI, 4.4%-6.7%) for metal-on-UHMWPE compared with 2.8% (95% CI, 2.6%-3.2%)
for metal-on-HXLPE.
In their study, Li et al1 did not explain in detail
why their cohort showed a much lower incidence
of excessive polyethylene wear or aseptic loosening
compared with the literature. One possible
explanation could be the age of the studied patients:
more than half of their patients were older than 60
years. It is well known that ‘wear is a function of use,
not time’. Elderly patients are generally less physically active, and this results in less wear.
The study by Li et al1 demonstrated good
clinical and radiological outcomes with THA with
ceramic on UHMWPE articulation in a Chinese
population. The data, however, are of little clinical
significance in today’s practice as most of the THAs
utilised HXLPE liner; UHMWPE liners are obsolete.
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