• BACKGROUND
    • Adverse local tissue reactions (ALTRs) around a modular neck stem at our institution lead to a 13.5% rate of revision. The purpose of this study was to report the clinical results of revision total hip arthroplasty (THA) in this patient population.
  • METHODS
    • We identified 80 hips in 77 patients who underwent revision THA due to neck-stem corrosion. Intraoperative and postoperative complications, clinical outcomes, re-revision rates, and the postoperative ion levels were recorded.
  • RESULTS
    • The mean follow-up period after revision was 45.3 ± 16.3 months (range 24-81 months). There were no intraoperative mechanical complications during the revision surgery. Eight hips (10%) had postoperative complications related to the revision implant, of which 6/8 came to re-revision: postoperative implant dislocation in 4 hips-2 treated nonsurgically, aseptic loosening of femoral component in 2 hips, and periprosthetic femoral fracture in 2 hips. No patients had recurrence of ALTR nor the recurrence of groin pain within the follow-up period. With 2 exceptions, ion levels normalized within one year of the revision surgery. The survival rate was 94% (95% confidence interval 84-98) at 32 months and 82% (95% confidence interval 56-93) at 63 months after revision THA (using re-revision THA due to any reason as the endpoint).
  • CONCLUSION
    • Intraoperative complication, postoperative complication, and re-revision rates are equivalent to femoral revision surgeries for other causes (infection, fracture, loosening). We recommend selecting revision-type stems to minimize the risk of femoral loosening or periprosthetic fracture, and larger femoral heads or dual mobility bearings to minimize the risk of dislocation.