Repeated cobalt and chromium ion measurements in patients with bilateral large-diameter head metal-on-metal ReCap-M2A-Magnum total hip replacement




Sakari Pietiläinen, Heikki Mäntymäki, Tero Vahlberg, Aleksi Reito, Antti Eskelinen, Petteri Lankinen, Keijo Mäkelä

PublisherTaylor and Francis Ltd

2020

Acta Orthopaedica

Acta Orthopaedica

91

4

378

382

5

1745-3674

1745-3674

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1080/17453674.2020.1751940

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/47400621



Background and purpose: Whole-blood (WB) chromium (Cr) and cobalt (Co) measurements are vital in the follow-up of metal-on-metal total hip replacement (MoM THR) patients. We examined whether there is a substantial change in repeated WB, Co, and Cr levels in patients with bilateral ReCap-M2A-Magnum THR. We also specified the number of patients exceeding the safe upper limit (SUL) of WB Co and Cr in the repeated measurement.

Patients and methods: We identified 141 patients with bilateral ReCap-M2A-Magnum THR operated in our institution. 61 patients had repeated WB metal ion measurements with bilateral MoM implants still in situ in the second measurement. The mean time elapsing from the first measurement (initial measurement) to the second (control measurement) was 1.9 years (SD = 0.6, range 0.2–3.5). We used earlier established SUL levels for bilateral implants by Van Der Straeten et al. (2013).

Results: The median (range) Co and Cr values decreased in the repeated measurement from 2.7 (0.6–25) to 2.1 (0.5–21) and 2.6 (0.8–14) to 2.1 (0.5–18) respectively. In 13% of the patients Co levels exceeded the SUL in the initial measurement and the proportion remained constant, at 13%, in the repeated measurement. In 5% of the patients, Cr levels were above SUL in the initial measurement and an equal 5% in the control measurement.

Interpretation: Repeated WB metal ion levels did not increase in patients with bilateral ReCap-M2A-Magnum THR with a mean 1.9-year measurement interval. Long-term development of WB metal ion levels is still unclear in these patients.


Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 15:56