BMJ Surgery, Interventions, & Health Technologies (Oct 2024)

The impact of adjuvant antibiotic hydrogel application on the primary stability of uncemented hip stems

  • Georgios Orfanos,
  • Ivan Zderic,
  • Boyko Gueorguiev,
  • Pamela Nylund,
  • Matteo D'Este,
  • Peter Varga

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjsit-2024-000307
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1

Abstract

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Objectives To assess the effect of adjuvant antibiotic-loaded hydrogel application on the primary stability of implanted uncemented hip stems.Design Biomechanical study.Setting An electro-mechanic material test system (#5866, Instron, Norwood, MA, USA) equipped with a 10-kN load cell was used. A staircase loading protocol was applied via quasi-static ramped compression loading at 0.005 mm/s and six different load levels between 500 N and 3000 N in 500 N intermittent load increase steps.Participants 12 artificial femora were prepared and received a collarless uncemented standard offset stem (Corail; DePuy Synthes, Zuchwil, Switzerland).Interventions The two groups were prepared with or without the antibiotic-loaded hydrogel.Main outcome measures Construct stiffness was determined from the recorded load-displacement curves and stem subsidence was measured via motion tracking.Results Construct stiffness (control: 4176±240 N/mm; intervention: 4588±448 N/mm) was not significantly different between the groups (p=0.076). Stem subsidence increased significantly over the increasing load levels in each separate group (p≤0.002) and remained not significantly different between the groups (p=0.609).Conclusions The application of antibiotic-loaded hydrogel was associated with non-inferior performance in terms of primary uncemented hip stem stability. This finding makes the prospect of adjuvant antibiotic-loaded hydrogel application potentially feasible; however, it requires further investigations prior to translation in the clinical practice.