Abstract
Large femoral head sizes are commonly used in total hip arthroplasty (THA) to minimize the risk of instability. With small acetabular cup-size, large femoral head diameter often results in the use of thin polyethylene liners. The purpose of this study was to evaluate clinical and radiographic results of large femoral heads against thin polyethylene liners with minimum 5-year follow-up. This was a retrospective review identifying 58 primary THAs utilizing thin polyethylene inserts from one manufacturer (X3 polyethylene, Stryker, Mahwah, NJ) and large femoral heads (36 mm or greater) with minimum 5-year follow-up. A total of 3 patients were deceased and 11 lost to follow-up, leaving 44 patients for review. All patients were female with mean age 65.7 (range 26-85) and mean body mass index (BMI) 29.9 (range 19.6-45.4). Average length of follow-up was 8.5 years (range 5.1-11.3). Outcome measures included survivorship, complications, PROMs and radiographic analysis. There were four revisions: two aseptic loosening, one prosthetic joint infection, and one recurrent dislocation. Average HOOS-Jr, FJS-12, and patient satisfaction using Likert score was 94.3/100, 92.9/100, and 4.69/5.00, respectively, with 94% of patients reporting being satisfied or very satisfied. Radiographic analysis at average of 8.5 years demonstrated well-fixed implants without evidence of progressive radiolucent lines, osteolysis, or failure of the polyethylene liner. Survivorship using failure of the thin polyethylene liner as the endpoint was 100% at an average of 8.5 years. Thin polyethylene liners used with large femoral head sizes in small acetabular cups demonstrated excellent results at average 8.5-year follow-up with no cases of liner fracture or osteolysis.
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