Mid- and long-term efficacy of surgical treatment of Vancouver B2 and B3 periprosthetic femoral fractures
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RESEARCH ARTICLE
Open Access
Mid- and long-term efficacy of surgical treatment of Vancouver B2 and B3 periprosthetic femoral fractures Jian-Ning Sun1, Yu Zhang1, Ye Zhang1, Jia-Ming Zhang2, Xiang-Yang Chen1* and Shuo Feng1*
Abstract Background: The incidence of fractures around the femoral prosthesis among patients undergoing hip arthroplasty is increasing and has become the third leading cause of hip revision. While numerous methods for the surgical treatment of periprosthetic femoral fractures (PFFs) have been proposed, only few reports have examined the longterm efficacy of surgical treatment. This study aims to examine the mid-and long-term efficacy of surgical treatment among patients with Vancouver B2 and B3 PFFs. Methods: This retrospective study evaluated the surgical outcomes of patients with Vancouver B2 and B3 PFFs between 2007 and 2011. The minimum follow-up time was eight years. Fracture healing, prosthesis stability, complications, patient quality of life SF-36 score, and survival rate were evaluated during the follow-up assessments. Results: A total of 83 patients were included and had an average follow-up period of 120.3 months. Among these patients, 69 were classified as Vancouver B2 and were treated with a distal fixation stem, whereas 14 cases were classified as Vancouver B3 and were treated with modular femoral prosthesis by using a proximal femoral allograft technique. A total of 15 patients underwent secondary revision surgery, and prosthesis dislocation was identified as the main cause of secondary revision. 80 (96.4%) cases of fractures were clinically healed. The mortality rate in the first year after surgery was 8.4% (7/83). The overall 5-year Kaplan–Meier survival rate for these patients was 75.9%. Meanwhile, the 5-year Kaplan–Meier survival rate for the implants was 86.9%. The final follow-up SF-36 score of the patients was 48.3 ± 9.8. Conclusions: Patients with Vancouver B2 and B3 PFFs show high mortality in the first year after their surgery, and the Kaplan–Meier analysis results showed that such mortality tends to plateau after 5 years. Prosthesis dislocation was identified as the primary cause of secondary revision. Keywords: Vancouver B2/B3, Periprosthetic femoral fractures, Hip arthroplasty
Background After aseptic loosening and infection, periprosthetic femoral fractures (PFFs) have been identified as the third leading cause of revision, with incidence rates ranging from 0.1 to 2.1% [1, 2]. Incidence of PFFs continues to increase * Correspondence: [email protected]; [email protected] 1 Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Affiliated Hospital of Xuzhou Medical University, 99 Huaihai Road, Xuzhou 221002, Jiangsu, China Full list of author information is available at the end of the article
every year along with the continuous aging of the population and the increasing frequency of primary hip replacements [3, 4]. Data from the Swedish National Arthroplasty Registry revealed that revision surgery caused by PFFs account for approximately 9.3 to 14.7% of all hip revision surgerie
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