Contact Information: For more information, contact: Lauren Pearson (224)374-8610 (847)384-4031 Catherine Dolf (847)894-9112 (847)384-4034
X-Why? The Gender Implant
Are These Newer Technologies a Necessity or Merely a Trend?
| Source: AAOS
SAN FRANCISCO, CA--(Marketwire - March 6, 2008) - It has been heavily researched that men
and women are in fact, anatomically different. But are they so different
they require special and customized replacement parts?
According to the American Academy of
Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS), over 760,000 total hip and knee
replacement procedures -- which help patients to regain mobility and
quality of life -- were performed in 2005, including:
-- 235,000 total
hip replacements
-- 125,000 patients were women and 108,000 were men
-- 534,000 total
knee replacements
-- 335,000 patients were women and 176,000 were men
Until recently, orthopaedic surgeons chose from an array of standard
implants which were designed to fit both men and women patients. However,
the statistics show a larger percentage of women need joint replacement
surgery. This factor along with recent advances in technology, have
sparked the release of gender-specific knee implants, claiming to offer
women a "better fit."
"Women represent two-thirds of patients getting knee replacements," said
Aaron Rosenberg, MD, professor in the Department of Orthopedic Surgery at
Rush Medical College, Chicago. Dr. Rosenberg was involved in the
development and production of the Zimmer Gender-Specific Knee, which hit
the market less than a year ago. "The generic implants we had in the past
were never specifically designed to fit a woman," noted Dr. Rosenberg."
"The distal femur (thigh bone) in a woman's knee has a distinctly different
shape than that of a man's," said Dr. Rosenberg. "A woman's hip rotation is
also different and these differences can be addressed in the implant
design. Historically, the success of knee replacement has been linked to
improving the way these implants fit the broad range of normal human
anatomy, and this is another step in that direction for what is clearly a
distinguishable and rather large group of patients," noted Dr. Rosenberg.
According to Joshua Jacobs, MD, "In many cases, these gender-specific
implants actually do fit a woman's anatomy better." Dr. Jacobs is
associate dean for Research Development of Rush Medical College, Chicago,
and associate chairman for Academic Programs in the Department of
Orthopaedic Surgery. "The question we then need to ask ourselves is does a
gender-specific implant affect a patients' clinical outcome."
The question Dr. Jacobs poses remains unanswered. Gender knee implants
have not been on the market long enough for orthopaedic researchers to do
long-term clinical outcome studies.
However, physicians can assess the long-term clinical outcomes on regular,
non-gender specific implants, as a baseline. Two new studies, presented
today at the AAOS 75th Annual Meeting in San Francisco, suggest a woman's
clinical outcome is no different than a man's outcome when using regular,
non-gender, standard specific implants.
One study looked at the survivorship and clinical outcomes of both men and
women who underwent a hip replacement with a regular, non-gender, standard
specific implant. The study's lead author, Robert Barry Bourne, MD,
FRCSC, Professor, Department of Surgery, Division of Orthopaedic Surgery,
University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada, studied over 3,400
patients who underwent total hip replacement. His sample included: 1,941
women and 1,537 men.
He found that women demonstrated greater life of the implant, but little
statistical difference in clinical outcome scores. "This leads one to
question the need for a gender implant," said Dr. Bourne.
"One goal in knee replacement surgery is to pick the implant that fits the
patient the best," said Dr. Jacobs. "This is done on an individual
case-by-case basis. While the gender implant is not a necessity in every
case, it does offer additional sizing options and allows the surgeon to use
an implant that may be a better fit for the patient's individual anatomy."
Dr. Jacobs will sit on a panel along with Dr. Rosenberg, Dr. Bourne, Andrew
Glassman, MD, and Timothy Brox, MD and debate, "X-Why? The Gender Implant
-- Necessity or Trend?" at a media briefing to be held Thursday, March 6,
2008 at 8:30 a.m. at the Moscone Convention Center, San Francisco in room
224.
Editor's Note: Full industry relationship disclosure information for each
AAOS media briefing participant is available upon request. Please contact
Catherine Dolf, (Cell) (847)-894-9112 dolf@aaos.org or Lauren Pearson,
(Cell) (224)-374-8610 lpearson@aaos.org for more information.
AAOS
Gender Knee Technology Overview
Dr. Bourne's abstract P041
Tim Brox, MD abstract P172
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AAOS
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