Abstract

Background and purposeIntraoperative periprosthetic femoral fractures (IPFFs) can occur during primary total hip arthroplasty (THA). We describe the incidence of IPFFs during THA in Norway and estimate potential risk factors that could be associated with IPFFPatients and methodsData from the Norwegian Arthoplasty Register (1987–2020) was used: 2,268 IPFFs from 218,423 primary THAs in 172,598 patients. The following factors were analyzed: sex, age, diagnosis, previous operation on the same hip, surgical approach, and stem fixation technique. Association of these factors with IPFF risk was assessed using multivariable Poisson regression.ResultsIPFF occurred during 2,268 operations with an incidence of 1.0% among all primary THAs. The risk of IPFF was associated with female sex (relative risk 1.8; 99% CI 1.5–2.1), age 80–90 years and age over 90 years (compared with age 60–70 years: 1.3; CI 1.0–1.6 and 2.6; CI 1.6–4.3, respectively), non-osteoarthritis diagnoses (2.2; CI 1.9–2.6), previous surgery to the same hip (1.8; CI 1.5–2.2), lateral approach (compared with the posterior approach: 1.5; CI 1.1–2.0), and cementless stem fixation (2.7; CI 2.0–3.6).InterpretationSurgeons should be aware of the factors associated with an increased risk of IPFF: female sex, age above 80 years, non-osteoarthritis diagnoses, and previous surgery to the same hip. Cemented stem fixation and posterior approach should be favored in high-risk patients, such as elderly women.

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