The Journal of arthroplasty
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To determine the factors influencing surgeons' choice of implants for total hip arthroplasty (THA) and total knee arthroplasty (TKA), 650 surveys were mailed to all active members of the American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons practicing in the United States; 364 surveys (56%) were completed and returned. Analysis revealed that the average number of total hip and total knee replacements performed by the respondents in 1997 was 81 and 97; there was substantial regional variation. The average number of hip implant and knee implant brands used by these surgeons in 1997 was 2.4 and 1.8. ⋯ Orthopaedic surgeons perceive that they are losing control of implant choice in THA and TKA. Cost of implants is one of the most significant factors influencing which implant is chosen. Patients (the true payors), however, overwhelmingly want their surgeons to choose the implant used at surgery, and they want quality, not cost, to be the primary determinant of this decision.
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Nationwide, computer-based reporting of all arthroplasties performed in Finland was started in January 1980. Using data from these records, a cohort of 31,651 polyethylene-on-metal total hip arthroplasty (THA) patients was followed up for cancer, using Finnish Cancer Registry data, from 1980 to 1995. During follow-up, 2,367 cancers were observed. ⋯ SIRs relating to soft tissue cancers and bone sarcomas did not differ significantly from unity. No sarcoma was observed at the site of a prosthesis. THA seems to play no major role in cancer causation.