Rapidly Progressive Osteoarthritis of the Hip: A Prospective Study

J Clin Med. 2024 Apr 23;13(9):2467. doi: 10.3390/jcm13092467.

Abstract

Background: Rapidly progressive osteoarthritis of the hip (RPOH) is a rare syndrome that involves the femoral head and acetabulum. Methods: We analyzed the incidence of RPOH in 2022. The inclusion criteria included a clinical history of pain for 1-6 months and a decrease in joint space of > 2 mm within one year or a decrease in joint space by 50% in that time accompanied by femoral and/or acetabular bone destruction. Exclusion: There are no other destructive arthropathies and no evolutionary radiological image sequence. Results: There were 15 patients, 16 hips, an incidence around 3.17%, a 1:1 laterality ratio, and 1 bilateral affected. The mean average age is 77.35 years. The male/female ratio is 1:2. The average BMI is 31.2. The time of the onset of the symptoms to the patient's diagnosis is 5 months. The functionally modified Harris scale (MHS) had an average score of 30 points. They had surgery hip arthroplasty with a cementless cup in all cases, a revision cup in one of them, and a double mobility cup in the other, with the stem cemented three times. There were no post-surgical complications. Functionally was achieved at 3 months. The average MHS is 70 at 12 months. The average MHS is 85. Conclusions: RPOH is an idiopathic entity characterized by great clinical involvement and rapid radiological evolution. It is most common in women around 77 years of age. The bone quality requires surgical alternatives to implants, and it has good functional recovery post-surgery.

Keywords: osteoarthritis (OA); rapidly progressive osteoarthritis of the hip (RPOH); risk factor; systematic review; total hip arthroplasty.

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.