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Metal-on-metal Hip Prostheses: Do They Have Systemic Effects? (HipLink)

R

Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital NHS Trust

Status

Completed

Conditions

Heart Failure
Hip Replacement

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study aims to determine whether subjects who underwent large-diameter metal-on-metal hip arthroplasty are more likely to have developed heart failure or other conditions as compared to subjects with conventional hip replacements.

We plan to link the National Joint Registry for England, Wales and Northern Ireland to the National Heart Failure Audit and GP records.

Full description

Background: Chronic systemic exposure to very high concentrations of cobalt or chromium following large diameter metal-on-metal hip resurfacing or hip replacement (MOMHR) associates with cardiac, thyroid, visual, hearing, and peripheral neurological deficits. Chronic exposure to lower circulating metal levels also associates with changes in cardiac function and bone metabolism in case-control analyses. However, it remains unclear what the risk of these problems is in the general population exposed to MOMHR.

Aims: We aim to establish the prevalence of cardiac, endocrine, neurological disorders, and distant site fracture history (forearm, spine) in recipients of MOMHR, and establish whether this differs to that found in the general population of the same age and sex distribution, and also to recipients of hip replacement using a conventional bearing.

Methods: We will use NJR data linked to the Clinical Practice Research Dataset (CPRD) to establish the prevalence of cardiac, endocrine, neurological disorders, and distant site fracture history (forearm, spine) in the 3 study populations.

Outcome measures: All defined as the event occurring at any point following MOMHR surgery.

Primary outcome measure:

History of cardiac failure, as defined by IDC9-CM code 150, or equivalent CPRD codes

Secondary outcome measures:

  1. History of treated or untreated acquired hypothyroidism (ICD9 244.8), or equivalent
  2. Fracture history at a site distant to the ipsilateral hip (ICD9 820.00 to 826.1)
  3. Acquired neurological disorders, including extra-pyramidal disorders (ICD9 332 and 333), spinocerebellar degenerative disease (ICD9 334) and other paralytic syndromes (ICD9 344)
  4. Acquired blindness and low vision (ICD9 369)
  5. Acquired hearing loss (ICD9 389)

Analyses will be conducted with age, sex, and joint disease diagnosis matching. Analyses will be stratified by sex to establish whether any differences are sex specific, and adjusted for age and other comorbidities, including history of type 2 diabetes, pre-existing ischaemic heart disease, hypertension, and pre-existing use of drugs that may affect cardiac function.

Enrollment

800,000 patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Acceptable patients registered with an up to standard practice which participates in the CPRD linkage scheme.
  • Have at least 6 (or 12) months of valid follow up in the primary care database.
  • Primary or revision hip replacement on National Joint Registry (NJR) database occurring to during the period of availability of metal-on-metal implants, and during the available primary care follow up period for that patient.
  • NHS number and other linkage identifiers available for both data sources
  • Patient consent to NJR use of patient data (which is present for 99.6% of records on NJR)

Exclusion criteria

  • Procedures on NJR database performed in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland (as these areas are not been included in the CPRD linkage scheme)
  • Patients whose hips were implanted in the past 6 months - this exclusion criterion will be implemented post linkage of the data.

Trial design

800,000 participants in 2 patient groups

Metal-on-Metal Hip Replacement
Other Hip Replacement
Description:
Other types of hip replacement, such as metal-on-polyethylene or ceramic-on-ceramic

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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