Abstract

Glenoid component loosening is a common cause of failure after anatomic total shoulder arthroplasty. Prior studies of all-polyethyleneglenoid implants with hybrid fixation did not show early glenoid radiolucency to be clinically significant. The purpose of this study was to determine the clinical significance of progression of radiolucency around the central peg of the glenoid component. We identified 73 shoulders that underwent primary anatomic total shoulder arthroplasty between January 1995 and May 2015 for osteoarthritis with an all-polyethylene pegged glenoid, with a minimum follow-up interval of 2 years between early and late follow-up. Demographic, radiographic (central-peg osteolysis [CPO] and central-peg grading [CPG]), and outcome variables comprising the Penn Shoulder Score (PSS) and revision surgery were collected. Clinical failure was defined as a PSS decrease >11.4 points (ie, PSS failure) or revision surgery. The average patient age at surgery was 65 ± 7 years, and 63% of patients were men. The median initial follow-up period was 14 months (interquartile range, 12-25 months), and the final median follow-up period was 56 months (interquartile range, 47-69 months). Revision surgical procedures were performed in 4 patients, and 17 PSS failures occurred. We found that CPO at final follow-up, CPGprogression, and worse PSS at follow-up were associated with revision surgery (P < .05). We also found younger age at surgery, CPO at final follow-up, CPG progression, and greater glenoid component retroversion at final follow-up to be associated with clinical failure (PSS failure or revision surgery) (P < .05). Multivariate analysis found only CPG progression to be associated with clinical failure (P < .001). CPO and CPG progression were associated with clinical failure, defined as decreasing clinical outcome scores or revision surgery.

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