Hip surgery
hype
by:
Judy Foremen
06/23/08
An alternative to hip replacement
is popular with the young and active, but is it
worth the risks?
Jeff Stewart, 43, a house painter
and former high school and college athlete,
remembers the exact moment his hip gave out:
Valentine's Day 2006.
"I bent down to paint something
low. When I got up, my hip never stopped hurting
until I woke up from surgery in January 2007," he
said. The pain, due to an anatomical abnormality
made worse by years of wear and tear, was so bad
that sometimes all he could do was lie on his
recliner and watch TV: "When you are in so much
pain, your life is reduced to that."
But like a growing number of
young, active people, Stewart eschewed the "gold
standard" treatment - total hip replacement surgery
- in favor of a new procedure that, propelled by
aggressive marketing featuring pictures of vigorous,
youngish athletes, is sweeping the United States:
hip resurfacing.
The main claim for resurfacing is
that it can preserve more of the thigh bone, making
any subsequent surgery more feasible if the initial
repair wears out.
Stewart, who paid $30,000 for the
procedure and follow-up care because it was not then
covered by insurance, is delighted with the results.
He can once again "paint million-dollar houses by
myself and jump up on roofs."
But many orthopedic surgeons,
including the one who performed Stewart's surgery,
Dr. Carl Talmo at New England Baptist Hospital, are
worried about the rate at which doctors, most of
whom are still on a steep learning curve for this
technically demanding procedure, are jumping to do
it. (Resurfacing is so new that statistics on the
number of people who get it will not be available
until next year, according to the American Academy
of Orthopaedic Surgeons.)
"I'm encouraged, but I also harbor
a healthy skepticism toward resurfacing," said
Talmo, who added that Stewart was his first -
carefully selected - patient. "There's tremendous
potential for young, active adults," he said, "but
we need to be cautious because there is also the
potential for this to be overutilized in the wrong
patients.
"Every objective study of hip
resurfacing anywhere in the world demonstrates
slightly higher failure rates in the first one to
five years than total hip replacement," Talmo added.
In hip resurfacing, surgeons shave
down the tip of the thigh bone, capping it with
metal, and then scrape out the hip socket into which
the cap fits and line the socket with metal. The
surgery and recovery with resurfacing can take just
as long as with the standard replacement operation,
and it often requires a bigger incision.
Dr. Michael Millis, director of
the adolescent and young adult hip unit at
Children's Hospital Boston, put it more bluntly:
"Resurfacing is very attractive because of its great
stability. But it's a harder operation. There's more
blood loss. And nobody has 20-year results."
Dr. Donald Reilly, an orthopedic
sur geon at the Baptist, was blunter still. If a
surgeon recommends hip resurfacing, he said, "Run
away as fast as you can. Or limp out of that office.
There is no advantage and many disadvantages. It
won't give you anything more than a total hip
replacement, and with some significant downsides."
Strong words, to be sure,
especially given the longer use of resurfacing in
Australia, Canada, the UK, and Belgium. Though
resurfacing is now covered by insurance in this
country, some patients still fly to Belgium and
other nations where surgeons are more experienced
and the operation may be cheaper.
In the United States, the first
device, dubbed the "Birmingham hip," was approved by
the US Food and Drug Administration only in May
2006. The FDA approved a second device, the Cormet,
in July 2007.
More devices are in the pipeline,
as manufacturers seek to capture a growing market:
athletic, healthy baby boomers with strong bones but
hips damaged by congenital abnormalities like
Stewart's or osteoarthritis.
It is a tall order.
Normally, the hip joint is a
smoothly functioning ball and socket, with the ball,
the head of the thigh bone (femur), fitting snugly
and painlessly into the socket, a cup-shaped bone of
the pelvis called the acetabulum.
In total hip replacement surgery,
which is performed nearly 300,000 times a year,
according to the American Academy of Orthopaedic
Surgeons, doctors cut off the head of the femur and
insert a rod with a metal ball on top into the leg
bone. They also remove bone from the pelvic "socket"
and insert a plastic "cup" into which the metal ball
fits.
Replacement surgery "works 98
percent of the time," said Reilly of the Baptist.
The devices can be metal, ceramic, plastic, or a
combination. But if, after 10 to 20 years, the
patient needs the hip replaced again, the second
surgery is more difficult because so much bone was
removed the first time.
In other words, total hip
replacement is fine for older people whose life
expectancy more or less equals that of the hip
replacement. But for young people like Stewart, who
might need two or three revisions, resurfacing might
make more sense.
"It's a weird argument - the idea
that if you need a revision, the revision will be
easier [with resurfacing] than with a full hip
replacement, but if you're younger, this is
realistic," said Dr. Sean Rockett, an orthopedic
surgeon at Newton-Wellesley Hospital who does
resurfacing, though less often than hip
replacements.
Resurfacing involves removal of
less bone from the femur, thus in theory making any
subsequent revision more feasible, although this
might be somewhat offset by the need to remove more
bone from the pelvis. There are no long-term studies
of resurfacing yet.
And there are serious risks,
including fracture of the neck of the thigh bone
because it is hard for surgeons to preserve the
blood supply to the bone during surgery. Many people
do not qualify for resurfacing, if they have kidney
problems or weak bones from osteoporosis or are
women of childbearing age. The resurfacing devices
are "metal on metal," which means metal ions can get
into the bloodstream and potentially affect the
fetus.
The ideal solution, said Millis,
is to have joint-saving surgery, which, if done in
time, can often delay or prevent the need for total
hip replacement or resurfacing. Most people who have
osteoarthritis develop it because of mechanical
problems - an alignment problem or an abnormality in
the shape of the hip joint.
"Some people with even major hip
pain have hips that can be saved," Millis said.
For Jeff Stewart at least,
resurfacing has brought a new lease on life.
"Growing up," he said, "I couldn't
open my legs more than two feet" because of his hip
deformity. "Now, not only can I stretch, I can drive
my motorcycle [without pain]. And I do 30 minutes of
cardio in the morning, paint all day, go to the gym
for another 30 minutes of cardio, and lift weights.
It's amazing."
Judy Foreman’s column runs every other week. Past
columns are available on
www.myhealthsense.com.
Listen to her live
call-in webcast radio show every Wednesday night
from 8:30 to 9:30 EST on
http://www.healthtalk.com.
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