Background: Metal-on-metal bearing surfaces have been reintroduced
for use during total hip replacement. To assess tissue reactions to various
types of articulations, we studied the histological appearance of
periprosthetic tissues retrieved from around metal-on-metal and
metal-on-polyethylene total hip replacements and compared these findings with
the appearance of control tissues retrieved at the time of primary
arthroplasty.
Methods: Periprosthetic tissues were obtained at the time of
revision of twenty-five cobalt chromium-on-cobalt chromium, nine cobalt
chromium-on-polyethylene, and ten titanium-on-polyethylene total hip
arthroplasties. Control tissues were obtained from nine osteoarthritic hips at
the time of primary total hip arthroplasty. Each tissue sample was processed
for routine histological analysis, and sections were stained with hematoxylin
and eosin. Quantitative stereological analysis was performed with use of light
microscopy.
Results: Tissue samples obtained from hips with metal-on-metal
implants displayed a pattern of well-demarcated tissue layers. A prominent
feature, seen in seventeen of twenty-five tissue samples, was a pattern of
perivascular infiltration of lymphocytes. In ten of the tissue samples
obtained from hips with metal-on-metal prostheses, there was also an
accumulation of plasma cells in association with macrophages that contained
metallic wear-debris particles. The surfaces of tissues obtained from hips
with metal-on-metal prostheses were more ulcerated than those obtained from
hips with other types of implants, particularly in the region immediately
superficial to areas of perivascular lymphocytic infiltration. The lymphocytic
infiltration was more pronounced in samples obtained at the time of revision
because of aseptic failure than in samples retrieved at the time of autopsy or
during arthrotomy for reasons other than aseptic failure.
Total-joint-replacement and surface-replacement designs of metal-on-metal
prostheses were associated with similar results. Tissue samples obtained from
hips with metal-on-polyethylene implants showed far less surface ulceration,
much less distinction between tissue layers, no pattern of lymphocytic
infiltration, and no plasma cells. The inflammation was predominantly
histiocytic. Tissues retrieved from hips undergoing primary joint replacement
showed dense scar tissue and minimal inflammation.
Conclusions and Clinical Relevance: The pattern and type of
inflammation seen in periprosthetic tissues obtained from hips with
metal-on-metal and metal-on-polyethylene implants are very different. At the
present time, we do not know the prevalence or clinical implications of these
histologic findings, but we suggest that they may represent a novel mode of
failure for some metal-on-metal joint replacements.