36 mm Ceramic-on-Ceramic Acetabular Cup Total Hip Replacement
NCT ID: NCT00953719
Last Updated: 2019-04-10
Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
243 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2003-04-01
2013-07-01
Brief Summary
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This arm of the study is designed to compare a 36 mm ceramic head and sleeve with a subset of the control (28mm ceramic head and a polyethylene sleeve) from the original study (G030075) (NCT#00208507) with additional follow-up, to determine if they perform as well.
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Detailed Description
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In spite of the improvements in THA, little change has occurred for the acetabular cup liner, which is usually made out of Ultra High Molecular Weight Polyethylene plastic (UHMWPe). Because it is plastic and inherently soft and somewhat pliable under load, the cup's articular surface must inevitability wear and produce debris. This biologic response is now thought to be a significant contributor to prosthetic component loosening, a primary failure mode of THR. UHMWPe also degrades with time in the body. As concerns about polyethylene wear and the associated untoward effects of the generated wear debris, and as THA continues to be used in younger and higher-demand patients with increasing life expectancies, interest in ceramic on ceramic total hip prosthesis has been renewed.
An alumina ceramic-on-ceramic acetabular coupling has been employed as an alternative to metal/polyethylene couplings. This ceramic-on-ceramic coupling has many advantages, including the elimination of polyethylene from the device system, wear rates that are appreciably less than those experienced with metal/polyethylene couplings and reduced biologic reactivity. The potential benefits of an alumina ceramic/ceramic bearing are significant.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NON_RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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36 mm
36 mm ceramic head on ceramic acetabular liner
36 mm ceramic head on a ceramic acetabular liner
Total hip replacement with a 36 mm ceramic head on a ceramic liner
28 mm ceramic-on-polyethylene
28 mm ceramic-on-polyethylene historical control
28 mm ceramic head on a polyethylene acetabular liner
Total hip replacement with a 28 mm ceramic head on a polyethylene liner.
Interventions
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36 mm ceramic head on a ceramic acetabular liner
Total hip replacement with a 36 mm ceramic head on a ceramic liner
28 mm ceramic head on a polyethylene acetabular liner
Total hip replacement with a 28 mm ceramic head on a polyethylene liner.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* X-ray evaluation confirms the presence of NIDJD
* Femoral and acetabular bone stock is sufficient, regarding strength and shape, and is suitable to receive the implants.
* Individuals 20 to 75 years of age at the time of surgery
* Patients with a previous total hip replacement of the contralateral leg who have a pain rating of none or slight and who are at least one year post arthroplasty are eligible for participation in the study.
* Harris Hip Score of 70 or lower
* Pain at least Moderate
Exclusion Criteria
* Previous Girdlestone procedure (resection arthroplasty) or surgical fusion of the hip to be operated.
* Acute femoral neck fracture.
* Above knee amputation of the contralateral and/or ipsilateral leg.
* Patients with bilateral degenerative joint disease requiring staged or simultaneous hip replacements.
* Patients with an existing total hip arthroplasty in the contralateral hip with a Harris Hip pain rating of mild, moderate, marked or totally disabled.
* Patients who have undergone total hip arthroplasties in their contralateral hips within the past 12 months.
* Patients with a known allergy to metal (e.g. jewelry).
* Skeletally immature patients (tibial and femoral epiphyses are not closed).
* Evidence of active infections that may spread to other areas of the body (e.g., osteomyelitis, pyogenic infection of the hip joint, overt infection, urinary tract infection, etc.).
* The presence of highly communicable disease or diseases that may limit follow-up (e.g., immuno-compromised conditions, hepatitis, active tuberculosis, etc.).
* Presence of known metastatic or neoplastic disease.
* Significant neurologic or musculoskeletal disorders or disease that may adversely affect gait or weight bearing, (e.g., muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis).
* Conditions that may interfere with the total hip arthroplasty's survival or outcome, (e.g., Paget's disease, Charcot's disease).
* Any patient believed to be unwilling or unable to comply with a rehabilitation program for a cementless total hip replacement or who indicates difficulty or inability to return for follow-up visits prescribed by the study protocol.
* Patient is known to be pregnant, a prisoner, mentally incompetent, and/or alcohol or drug abuser.
* Any systemic steroid therapy, excluding inhalers, within three months prior to surgery.
* Patients carrying the diagnosis of inflammatory degenerative arthritis (IDJD) to include the following composite diagnoses: rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, pigmented villonodular synovitis, juvenile rheumatory arthritis and other arthritic processes of inflammatory or autoimmune etiology.
* Patients requiring structural bone grafts in order to support the prosthetic component(s) or to shape the bone to receive the implant(s).
* Patients who refuse to provide consent to participate in the clinical investigation.
* Surgical replacement requires the use of an acetabular liner and femoral head greater or smaller than a 36mm diameter
20 Years
75 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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DePuy Orthopaedics
INDUSTRY
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Joel Politi, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Cardinal Orthopaedic Institute
Douglas Dennis, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Colorado Joint Replacement
Locations
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Sacramento, California, United States
Colorado Joint Replacement
Denver, Colorado, United States
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States
Cardinal Orthopaedic Institute
Columbus, Ohio, United States
Alexandria, Virginia, United States
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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COC 36 mm
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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