Abstract
BackgroundThis study aimed to provide an overview of device-related complications occurring in individuals with an upper or lower extremity amputation treated with a screw, press-fit or other type of bone-anchored implant as well as interventions related to these complications.MethodA systematic literature search was conducted in the MEDLINE, Cochrane, EMBASE, CINAHL and Web of Science databases. The included studies reported on device-related complications and interventions occurring in individuals with bone-anchored prostheses. The outcomes evaluated were death, infection, bone/device breakage, implant loosening, soft tissue complications, systemic events, antibiotic and surgical treatment. Subgroup analyses were performed for the following groups: a) implant type (screw, press-fit and other types of implants) and b) level of amputation (transfemoral, transtibial and upper extremity amputation).ResultsOf 309 studies, 12 cohort studies were eligible for inclusion, all of which had methodological shortcomings and 12 studies were excluded due to complete overlap of patient data. Implant infection were rare in certain transfemoral implants (screw: 2–11%, press-fit: 0–3%, Compress: 0%) but common in transtibial implants (29%). The same was observed for implant loosening, in transfemoral (screw: 6%, press-fit: 0–3%, Compress: 0%), transtibial implants (29%) as well as for upper extremity implants (13–23%). Intramedullary device breakage were rare in transfemoral implants (screw: 0%, press-fit: 1%, Compress: unknown) but frequent in individuals with transradial implants (27%) and absent in transtibial implants. Soft tissue infections and complications were common and underreported in most articles.ConclusionsMajor complications (e.g. implant infection, implant loosening and intramedullary device breakage) are rare in transfemoral bone-anchored prosthesis and seem to occur less frequently in individuals with press-fit implants. Minor complications, such as soft tissue infections and complications, are common but are substantially influenced by the learning curve, implant design and surgical technique. Data for patients treated with a transtibial, upper extremity or Compress implant are underreported, precluding definitive conclusions. There is a need for either an international database to report on or a standard core set of complications as well as the need to follow classification systems that result in unequivocal data.
Highlights
The prevalence of individuals with extremity amputation is high and is only expected to increase in the coming years.[1, 2] Large differences occur among different parts of the developed world depending largely on the prevalence of peripheral vascular disease, diabetes and combat-related activities.[3]
The same was observed for implant loosening, in transfemoral, transtibial implants (29%) as well as for upper extremity implants (13–23%)
Problems with prosthetic fixation and weight are more prevalent in individuals with upper extremity amputation. [10, 12] These socket-residuum interface problems lead to prosthesis intolerance and abandonment and have a severe impact on people’s activity levels and quality of life.[6, 9, 16, 23,24,25]
Summary
The prevalence of individuals with extremity amputation is high and is only expected to increase in the coming years.[1, 2] Large differences occur among different parts of the developed world depending largely on the prevalence of peripheral vascular disease, diabetes and combat-related activities.[3]. 56% of individuals with an upper and 80–95% with a lower extremity amputation use a prosthetic limb, with a rate of dissatisfaction with the prosthesis ranging from 18– 57%.[11,12,13,14] Skin problems are frequent in both upper and lower prosthetic limb users, ranging from 34–63% of all users [8, 15,16,17,18,19,20,21], and falling occurs in roughly half of individuals with a lower limb amputation due to poor proprioception and disbalance.[7, 22] Problems with prosthetic fixation and weight are more prevalent in individuals with upper extremity amputation. This study aimed to provide an overview of device-related complications occurring in individuals with an upper or lower extremity amputation treated with a screw, press-fit or other type of bone-anchored implant as well as interventions related to these complications
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