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Clinical Trials/NCT02801019
NCT02801019
Completed
Not Applicable

Wear and Creep of Vitamin E-Diffused Highly Cross-Linked Polyethylene Liners Randomized Radiostereometric Study of 70 Hips Followed for 2 Years

Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Sweden0 sites70 target enrollmentJune 2008
ConditionsOsteoarthritis

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Osteoarthritis
Sponsor
Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Sweden
Enrollment
70
Primary Endpoint
Wear of vitamin E incorporated highly cross linked polyethylene
Status
Completed
Last Updated
9 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Vitamin E incorporated highly cross linked polyethylene (E-XLPE) was developed to increase oxidative resistance of highly cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE) without affecting mechanical properties. The investigators evaluated this type of polyethylene in a randomized clinical study, using Radiostereometric Analysis (RSA). The objective of this study was to compare the early-term wear of E-XLPE to a compression annealed polyethylene liner (C-XLPE, ArComXL®). The clinical outcome at two years was not expected to be affected by the choice of polyethylene.

Detailed Description

First generation of modern highly cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE) was clinically introduced in 1998 and has in most countries become standard as bearing surface in total hip arthroplasty. Studies of these materials have shown significantly reduced femoral head penetration when compared to gamma sterilized conventional polyethylene. Thermaly treating (melting or annealing) is often a part of the manufacturing process of highly cross-linked polyethylenes. The polyethylene is exposed to irradiation to achieve cross-linking and improve wear resistance. Cross-linking by irradiation increases the amount of free radicals in the material.These radicals must be eliminated or stabilized to avoid oxidative degradation over time.Thermal treatment improves oxidation resistance but potentially changes the mechanical properties of the polyethylene. By annealing i.e. heat treatment under the melt temperature the material maintains better mechanical properties, but elimination of free radicals is suboptimal, which can lead to oxidation in vivo.Heat treatment of the polyethylene above the melt temperature will more effectively reduce or eliminate the amount of residual free radicals. This will increase oxidation resistance, but will negatively influence the mechanical properties of the material. Due to these limitations new generations of cross-linked polyethylene materials have been developed. Introducing Vitamin E (α-tocopherol), a natural antioxidant into the material prevents oxidative degradation and stabilizes the free radicals found in irradiated polyethylene plastic. In laboratory tests, polyethylene liners with incorporated vitamin-E have demonstrated similar wear, greater strength and better resistance to oxidation compared with the first generation cross-linked polyethylene. Currently, there are only laboratory studies on vitamin E diffused polyethylene available. The hypothesis in this study is that the early-term E-XLPE wear is low and comparable to a heat-treated XLPE. The investigators also hypothesize that implant fixation and clinical outcome at two years will be unaffected by the choice of polyethylene. The investigators therefore evaluated the early bedding in and wear in an uncemented arthroplasty supplied with liners made of vitamin E diffusion doped XLPE (E1®, Biomet, Warsaw, IN, USA). In the control group the investigators used the same uncemented hip prosthesis with polyethylene liners manufactured to achieve high levels of crosslinking without sacrificing the mechanical strength and extinguish residual free radicals (ArComXL® , Biomet, Warzaw, IN, USA).

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
June 2008
End Date
November 2011
Last Updated
9 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Sponsor
Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Sweden
Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Bita Shareghi

PhD student

Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Sweden

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • primary and certain subgroups of secondary osteoarthritis
  • Patients aged 20-75 years

Exclusion Criteria

  • inflammatory arthritis
  • cortisone or chemotherapy treatment
  • known osteoporosis or osteomalacia

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Wear of vitamin E incorporated highly cross linked polyethylene

Time Frame: up to 2 years

Evaluation of the early bedding in and wear in an uncemented arthroplasty supplied with liners made of vitamin E diffusion doped XLPE in comparsion to annealed polyethylene liner, ArComXL.

Secondary Outcomes

  • Cup and stem translations(up to 2 years)

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