Introduction: The periprosthetic femoral fracture (PFF) is a serious complication after primary total hip arthroplasty. We conducted a retrospective study to determine whether the PRIUS® system presented similar survival to other existing implants for the treatment of Vancouver B2 or B3 PFFs. Bone consolidation rate, functional results and complications were analysed.
Method: This is a bi-centric retrospective study between 2012 and 2017 including 39 patients with (B2/B3) PFFs treated by senior surgeons using a PRIUS® femoral implant. Implant survival, radiological outcome (fracture healing) and clinical scores (Oxford-OHS, Harris Hip Score-HHS, Postel Merle d'Aubigné-PMA, Devane and Charnley) were analysed. 10 patients had died before data collection and 5 patients were lost to follow-up. A total of 21 patients were able to undergo a clinical and radiological evaluation. The mean follow-up period was 3 years.
Results: The 3-year PRIUS® stem survival rate was 88.6% [95% CI, 77.2-100]. The consolidation rate was 81% (17/21). The rate of satisfied or very satisfied patients was 85.6% (18/21). Regarding the Devane score, activity level was maintained in 70.6% of cases (12/17) and decreased in 29.4% of cases (5/17), the Charnley score was stable in 94% of cases (16/17) and decreased in 6% of cases (1/17). The mean Oxford score was 28.8/48 (9.3; 16-48), the mean HHS was 67/100 (16.4; 46-91) and the mean PMA score was 12.6/18 (4.5; 2-18).
Conclusion: The results in terms of survival rate and bone consolidation are comparable to other literature series. The PRIUS® System can be added to the surgical arsenal in the treatment of (B2/B3) PFF, subject to confirmation of these results in the longer term.
Keywords: Implant revision; Modular femoral stem; PRIUS®; Periprosthetic hip fracture; Vancouver classification.
© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag France SAS, part of Springer Nature.