Journal of Clinical Medicine (Dec 2023)

Long-Term Survival Analysis of 5619 Total Ankle Arthroplasty and Patient Risk Factors for Failure

  • Sivakumar Allur Subramanian,
  • Hyong Nyun Kim,
  • SeongHyeon Kim,
  • Jihyun Hwang,
  • Dong I. Lee,
  • Hye Chang Rhim,
  • Sung Jae Kim,
  • Lew Schon,
  • Il-Hoon Sung

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13010179
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
p. 179

Abstract

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Background: Total ankle arthroplasty (TAA) has higher complication and failure rates compared to other surgical joint replacement procedures despite technological advances. This study aimed to find the long-term survivability of the TAA procedure and identify the patient risk factors for failure with one of the largest cohorts of patients in the literature. Methods: This retrospective cohort study involving cases between 2007 and 2018 analyzed patients who received an index primary TAA procedure in Korea. A total of 5619 cases were included in the final analysis. The TAA failure was defined as either a case with revision arthroplasty or a case with TAA implant removal and arthrodesis performed after primary TAA. Results: During the study period, the 5-year survival rate was 95.4% (95% CI, 94.7–96.1%), and the 10-year survival rate was 91.1% (95% CI, 89.1–93.1%). A younger age (p p = 0.013), diabetes (AHR, 1.443; p = 0.014), and alcohol abuse (AHR, 1.524; p = 0.032) showed a significantly high odds ratio for primary TAA failure in Cox regression analysis. Conclusion: The 10-year TAA survivorship rate was 91.1%. A younger age, chronic pulmonary disease, diabetes, and heavy alcohol consumption are risk factors for TAA.

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