Lawand Jad J, Lopez Ryan, Boufadel Peter, Daher Mohammad Y, Fares Mohamad, Yao Jie J, Khan Adam Z, Abboud Joseph A
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Rehabilitation, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX, USA.
Division of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery, Rothman Orthopaedic Institute, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
J Shoulder Elbow Surg. 2025 Jun;34(6):e355-e360. doi: 10.1016/j.jse.2024.08.017. Epub 2024 Oct 9.
As the average age of patients undergoing shoulder arthroplasty (SA) increases, the frequency of SA patients with osteoporosis is expected to rise. While the effects of osteoporosis have been described in the broader orthopedic literature, it is presently unclear how osteoporosis affects SA postoperative medical and implant-related outcomes.
A multicenter database TriNetX was queried for patients between 2011 and 2021 who underwent SA with and without osteoporosis. Patients with less than 2 years of follow-up and those with a prior shoulder hemiarthroplasty were excluded. Primary outcomes included 2-year periprosthetic joint infection, prosthesis dislocation, periprosthetic fracture, and revision surgery. Secondary outcomes included 90-day medical complications and readmissions. Osteoporotic and control patient cohorts were propensity matched in a 1:1 ratio.
Seven thousand eight hundred forty-two patients were included after matching in each cohort. Baseline demographic variables were similar between groups, except osteoporotic patients had a lower body mass index (28.6 vs. 31.0 kg/m; P < .001). Osteoporotic patients undergoing SA were more likely to experience wound disruptions, stroke, pulmonary embolism, deep vein thrombosis, myocardial infarction, anemia, pneumonia, renal failure, transfusion, and readmission within 90 days after surgery. At 2 years postoperative, osteoporotic SA patients experienced an elevated risk of mechanical loosening, periprosthetic joint infection, dislocation, periprosthetic fracture, and required revision surgery at a higher rate than control patients.
Osteoporotic patients undergoing SA are at greater risk for medical complications within the 90 days perioperative period as well as implant-related complications within 2 years of surgery. Patients and surgeons should be aware of the potential higher risk of complications in osteoporotic patients following SA, and further investigation into benefits of preoperative management and treatment of osteoporosis is necessary.
随着接受肩关节置换术(SA)患者的平均年龄增加,骨质疏松性SA患者的数量预计会上升。虽然骨质疏松症的影响在更广泛的骨科文献中已有描述,但目前尚不清楚骨质疏松症如何影响SA术后的医疗及植入物相关结局。
在多中心数据库TriNetX中查询2011年至2021年间接受SA且伴有或不伴有骨质疏松症的患者。排除随访时间少于2年的患者以及先前接受过肩关节半关节置换术的患者。主要结局包括2年假体周围关节感染、假体脱位、假体周围骨折和翻修手术。次要结局包括90天医疗并发症和再入院情况。骨质疏松症患者队列与对照患者队列按1:1的比例进行倾向匹配。
每组匹配后纳入7842例患者。除骨质疏松症患者的体重指数较低(28.
6 vs. 31.0 kg/m²;P <.001)外,两组间基线人口统计学变量相似。接受SA的骨质疏松症患者在术后90天内更易出现伤口裂开、中风、肺栓塞、深静脉血栓形成、心肌梗死、贫血、肺炎、肾衰竭、输血和再入院情况。术后2年,骨质疏松性SA患者发生机械性松动、假体周围关节感染、脱位、假体周围骨折的风险升高,且翻修手术率高于对照患者。
接受SA的骨质疏松症患者在围手术期90天内发生医疗并发症以及术后2年内发生植入物相关并发症的风险更高。患者和外科医生应意识到骨质疏松症患者接受SA后并发症风险可能更高,有必要进一步研究术前管理和治疗骨质疏松症的益处。