Re-revision total hip arthroplasty: Epidemiology and factors associated with outcomes

Abstract Introduction The epidemiology of re-revision total hip arthroplasty (THA) is not yet well-understood. We aim to investigate the epidemiology and risk-factors that are associated with re-revision THA. Methods 288 revision THA were analyzed between 1/2012 and 12/2013. Patients who underwent t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of clinical orthopaedics and trauma 2020-01, Vol.11 (1), p.43-46
Hauptverfasser: Yu, S, Saleh, H, Bolz, N, Buza, J, Iorio, R, Rathod, P.A, Schwarzkopf, R, Deshmukh, A.J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Introduction The epidemiology of re-revision total hip arthroplasty (THA) is not yet well-understood. We aim to investigate the epidemiology and risk-factors that are associated with re-revision THA. Methods 288 revision THA were analyzed between 1/2012 and 12/2013. Patients who underwent two or greater revision THA were included. Hips with first-revision due to periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) were excluded. Failure was defined as reoperation. Results 51 re-revision patients were available. Mean age was 59.6 (±14.2 years), 32 (67%) females, average BMI of 28.8 (±5.4), and median ASA 2 (23; 55%). The most common re-revision indications were acetabular component loosening (15; 29%), PJI (13; 25%) and instability (9; 18%). The most common indications for first revision in the re-revision population were acetabular component loosening (11; 27%), polyethylene wear (8; 19%) and instability (8; 19%). There was an increased risk of re-revision failure if the re-revision involved exchanging only the head and polyethylene liner (RR = 1.792; p = 0.017), instability was the first-revision indication (RR = 3.000; p 
ISSN:0976-5662
2213-3445
DOI:10.1016/j.jcot.2018.08.021