THE SCOTTISH ARTHROPLASTY PROJECT: OUTCOMES OF 601 TOTAL ANKLE ARTHROPLASTIES OVER A 20-YEAR PERIOD

2017 
Introduction Total ankle replacement (TAR) is performed for post-traumatic arthritis, inflammatory arthropathy, osteoarthritis and a range of other indications. The Scottish Arthroplasty Project (SAP) began collection of data on TAR in 1997. In this study, using data from the SAP, we examined the annual incidence of TAR between 1997 and 2015. Implant survivorship and the rate of general and joint-specific complications were also analysed. Methods We identified 601 patients from a national arthroplasty database who had undergone total ankle replacement between 1997 and 2015 and followed up these patients to a maximum of 20 years. We used established methods of linkage with national hospital episode statistics, population and mortality data to examine the incidence of complications and implant survivorship. Results There were 601 primary TAR procedures with an overall incidence of 0.6 per 10 5 population per year. Indications for ankle replacement included: posttraumatic arthritis/osteoarthritis 63%; inflammatory arthropathy 25% and other diagnoses including: haemophilia; haemochromatosis; psoriatic arthritis and avascular necrosis in 12%. The peak incidence was in the 6th decade. There was a female to male ratio of 1:1. The incidence of TAR increased over the study period (r= 0.9, p= Conclusion This study examines a large number of ankle replacements from an established arthroplasty dataset. The prevalence of TAR has increased over 19 years. Overall survivorship was similar to other published registry data on ankle replacements. Further work will look at the effect of surgeon volume on rate of complications, reoperation and survivorship.
    • Correction
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []