Association between bisphosphonate use and implant survival after primary total arthroplasty of the knee or hip: population based retrospective cohort study
Association between bisphosphonate use and implant survival after primary total arthroplasty of the knee or hip: population based retrospective cohort study
Objectives: To test whether bisphosphonate use is related to improved implant survival after total arthroplasty of the knee or hip.
Design: Population based retrospective cohort study.
Setting: Primary care data from the United Kingdom.
Participants: All patients undergoing primary total arthroplasty of the knee (n=18?726) or hip (n=23?269) in 1986-2006 within the United Kingdom’s General Practice Research Database. We excluded patients with a history of hip fracture before surgery or rheumatoid arthritis, and individuals younger than 40 years at surgery.
Intervention: Bisphosphonate users were classified as patients with at least six prescriptions of bisphosphonates or at least six months of prescribed bisphosphonate treatment with more than 80% adherence before revision surgery.
Outcome measures: Revision arthroplasties occurring after surgery, identified by READ and OXMIS codes. Parametric survival models were used to determine effects on implant survival with propensity score adjustment to account for confounding by indication.
Results: Of 41?995 patients undergoing primary hip or knee arthroplasty, we identified 1912 bisphosphonate users, who had a lower rate of revision at five years than non-users (0.93% (95% confidence interval 0.52% to 1.68%) v 1.96% (1.80% to 2.14%)). Implant survival was significantly longer in bisphosphonate users than in non-users in propensity adjusted models (hazard ratio 0.54 (0.29 to 0.99); P=0.047) and had an almost twofold increase in time to revision after hip or knee arthroplasty (time ratio 1.96 (1.01 to 3.82)). Assuming 2% failure over five years, we estimated that the number to treat to avoid one revision was 107 for oral bisphosphonates.
Conclusions: In patients undergoing lower limb arthroplasty, bisphosphonate use was associated with an almost twofold increase in implant survival time. These findings require replication and testing in experimental studies for confirmation.
d7222
Preito-Alhambra, D.
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Javaid, M.K.
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Judge, A.
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Murray, D.
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Carr, A.
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Cooper, C.
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6
Arden, N.K.
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6 December 2011
Preito-Alhambra, D.
fccfa5cf-bf88-45c2-b7c6-653890686b72
Javaid, M.K.
51d3310b-032e-4c15-83ac-b878bce090f3
Judge, A.
c6a83964-1d7c-4aa8-b2bf-9c264d1e487d
Murray, D.
8d6dda1e-e0a1-4f2d-a5b9-f9c0264f0b04
Carr, A.
85c8478c-1212-4d8b-986f-d3c212298807
Cooper, C.
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6
Arden, N.K.
23af958d-835c-4d79-be54-4bbe4c68077f
Preito-Alhambra, D., Javaid, M.K., Judge, A., Murray, D., Carr, A., Cooper, C. and Arden, N.K.
(2011)
Association between bisphosphonate use and implant survival after primary total arthroplasty of the knee or hip: population based retrospective cohort study.
British Medical Journal, 343, .
(doi:10.1136/bmj.d7222).
(PMID:22147909)
Abstract
Objectives: To test whether bisphosphonate use is related to improved implant survival after total arthroplasty of the knee or hip.
Design: Population based retrospective cohort study.
Setting: Primary care data from the United Kingdom.
Participants: All patients undergoing primary total arthroplasty of the knee (n=18?726) or hip (n=23?269) in 1986-2006 within the United Kingdom’s General Practice Research Database. We excluded patients with a history of hip fracture before surgery or rheumatoid arthritis, and individuals younger than 40 years at surgery.
Intervention: Bisphosphonate users were classified as patients with at least six prescriptions of bisphosphonates or at least six months of prescribed bisphosphonate treatment with more than 80% adherence before revision surgery.
Outcome measures: Revision arthroplasties occurring after surgery, identified by READ and OXMIS codes. Parametric survival models were used to determine effects on implant survival with propensity score adjustment to account for confounding by indication.
Results: Of 41?995 patients undergoing primary hip or knee arthroplasty, we identified 1912 bisphosphonate users, who had a lower rate of revision at five years than non-users (0.93% (95% confidence interval 0.52% to 1.68%) v 1.96% (1.80% to 2.14%)). Implant survival was significantly longer in bisphosphonate users than in non-users in propensity adjusted models (hazard ratio 0.54 (0.29 to 0.99); P=0.047) and had an almost twofold increase in time to revision after hip or knee arthroplasty (time ratio 1.96 (1.01 to 3.82)). Assuming 2% failure over five years, we estimated that the number to treat to avoid one revision was 107 for oral bisphosphonates.
Conclusions: In patients undergoing lower limb arthroplasty, bisphosphonate use was associated with an almost twofold increase in implant survival time. These findings require replication and testing in experimental studies for confirmation.
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Published date: 6 December 2011
Organisations:
Faculty of Health Sciences
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Local EPrints ID: 209629
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/209629
ISSN: 0959-8138
PURE UUID: ff4aec42-5275-43cf-aa2f-660c7fb0d047
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Date deposited: 31 Jan 2012 16:49
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:45
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Author:
D. Preito-Alhambra
Author:
M.K. Javaid
Author:
A. Judge
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D. Murray
Author:
A. Carr
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