Thirty-four porous-coated anatomical (PCA) total knee arthroplasties in
twenty-eight patients with rheumatoid arthritis were followed for an
average of seventeen months. In these thirty-four knees, twenty-three
tibial and fifteen femoral components were cemented. The rest were
uncemented. At follow-up, more than half of the knees (nineteen of
thirty-four) showed radiographic evidence of displacement of some of the
beads from the porous coating. In fourteen knees the beads loosened more
than three months postoperatively, and all of these knees had a radiolucent
zone. Six knees had beads within the joint. Eight of nine non-cemented
tibial components (excluding one tibial component) and five of the nineteen
femoral components that were not cemented showed late loosening of beads
(after three months). This study indicates that the metallurgical technique
for porous coating with heat-sintered cobalt-chromium beads does not
produce a coating that is sufficiently strong to prevent loosening in the
case of the porous-coated anatomical prosthesis. The long-term clinical
relevance of our findings is unclear. The mechanical strength of the porous
coating on the prosthetic surface should be improved and the prosthesis
should be tested in limited clinical studies before cementless fixation can
be recommended.