Publication detail

Clinical outcomes and survival comparison between NexGen all‑poly and its metal‑backed equivalent in total knee arthroplasty

APOSTOLOPOULOS, V. NACHTNEBL, L. MAHDAL, M. PAZOUREK, L. BOHÁČ, P. JANÍČEK, P. TOMÁŠ, T.

English title

Clinical outcomes and survival comparison between NexGen all‑poly and its metal‑backed equivalent in total knee arthroplasty

Type

journal article in Web of Science

Language

en

Original abstract

PurposeThis study aims to compare total knee replacement (TKA) with NexGen All-Poly (APT) and NexGen Metal-Backed (MBT) in terms of implant survivorship, reasons leading to implant failure and functional results of defined age categories.MethodsA single-centre, retrospective evaluation of 812 patients who underwent knee replacement with NexGen CR between 2005 and 2021, comparing a modern congruent APT component to a modular MBT equivalent component using a similar surgical technique at a notable mean follow-up duration. Implant survival, functional outcomes using the Knee Society Score and range of motion were evaluated and compared in different age categories.ResultsOf the 812 NexGen CR TKAs performed at our institution, 410 (50.4%) used APT components and 402 (49.6%) MBT components. The survival rate of NexGen APT was 97.1% and that of NexGen MBT was 93.2% (p = 0.36). Removal of the implant occurred overall in 15 cases, for MBT in ten cases, and for APT in four cases. The FS was proved to be significantly higher when APT components were implanted in younger patients than for MBT (p = 0.005). A similar range of motion between the components was recorded (p = 0.1926).ConclusionUnder defined conditions, we measured the clinical results of implants from a single manufacturer implanted in a single department using a similar surgical technique. Considering the limitations, we suggest that all-polyethylene tibial components are equal or even superior to metal-backed ones across the examined age categories.

English abstract

PurposeThis study aims to compare total knee replacement (TKA) with NexGen All-Poly (APT) and NexGen Metal-Backed (MBT) in terms of implant survivorship, reasons leading to implant failure and functional results of defined age categories.MethodsA single-centre, retrospective evaluation of 812 patients who underwent knee replacement with NexGen CR between 2005 and 2021, comparing a modern congruent APT component to a modular MBT equivalent component using a similar surgical technique at a notable mean follow-up duration. Implant survival, functional outcomes using the Knee Society Score and range of motion were evaluated and compared in different age categories.ResultsOf the 812 NexGen CR TKAs performed at our institution, 410 (50.4%) used APT components and 402 (49.6%) MBT components. The survival rate of NexGen APT was 97.1% and that of NexGen MBT was 93.2% (p = 0.36). Removal of the implant occurred overall in 15 cases, for MBT in ten cases, and for APT in four cases. The FS was proved to be significantly higher when APT components were implanted in younger patients than for MBT (p = 0.005). A similar range of motion between the components was recorded (p = 0.1926).ConclusionUnder defined conditions, we measured the clinical results of implants from a single manufacturer implanted in a single department using a similar surgical technique. Considering the limitations, we suggest that all-polyethylene tibial components are equal or even superior to metal-backed ones across the examined age categories.

Keywords in English

Knee arthroplasty;All-polyethylene knee replacement;NexGen;Implant survival;Knee Society Score

Released

18.04.2023

Publisher

Springer Nature

ISSN

1432-5195

Volume

47

Number

4

Pages from–to

2207–2213

Pages count

7

BIBTEX


@article{BUT183384,
  author="Vasileios {Apostolopoulos} and Luboš {Nachtnebl} and Michal {Mahdal} and Lukáš {Pazourek} and Petr {Boháč} and Pavel {Janíček} and Tomáš {Tomáš},
  title="Clinical outcomes and survival comparison between NexGen all‑poly and its metal‑backed equivalent in total knee arthroplasty",
  year="2023",
  volume="47",
  number="4",
  month="April",
  pages="2207--2213",
  publisher="Springer Nature",
  issn="1432-5195"
}