Patient-Reported Outcomes Before and After Primary and Revision Total Ankle Arthroplasty

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Abstract

Background: Studies examining the clinical outcomes of revision total ankle arthroplasty (TAA) are sparse. Revision TAA surgery has become more common with availability of revision implants and refinement of bone-conserving primary implants. In this study, patient-reported results and clinical outcomes were analyzed for a cohort of patients who underwent both primary and revision TAA at a single high-volume institution. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed prospectively collected data on 29 patients with failed primary total ankle arthroplasty. Cases of isolated polyethylene exchange, infection, or extra-articular realignment procedures were excluded. Patient-reported outcome (PRO) measures and clinical results were reviewed in this longitudinal study. Results: Fifteen patients (51.7%) underwent revision of just the talar and polyethylene components while 13 patients (44.8%) underwent revision of all components. The most common cause was talar subsidence (51.7%). The average time to revision was 3.9 years with a follow-up of 3.2 years after revision, and 3 (10.3%) revision arthroplasties required further surgery; 2 required conversion to arthrodesis and 1 required second revision TAA. Improvements in PROs were better after primary than revision TAA. Conclusions: Clinical and patient-reported results of revision ankle arthroplasty after metal component failure improved significantly but never reached the improvements seen after primary ankle arthroplasty. In our series, 10.3% of revision TAAs required a second revision TAA or arthrodesis surgery. Levels of Evidence: Therapeutic Level III, comparative series.

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Lachman, J. R., Ramos, J. A., Adams, S. B., Nunley, J. A., Easley, M. E., & DeOrio, J. K. (2019). Patient-Reported Outcomes Before and After Primary and Revision Total Ankle Arthroplasty. Foot and Ankle International, 40(1), 34–41. https://doi.org/10.1177/1071100718794956

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