# Correlation Analysis of Clinical Outcomes for Patients With Coronal Pelvic Obliquity After Total Hip Arthroplasty in Direct Anterior Approach

**Authors:** Tianyu Lai, Kaiwei Shen, Yiping Lan, Jinhua Chen, Eryou Feng

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/os.70060 · Orthopaedic Surgery · 2025-05-01

## TL;DR

This study shows that direct anterior approach total hip arthroplasty improves hip function and corrects pelvic tilt and leg length in patients with pelvic obliquity.

## Contribution

The study identifies the effectiveness of DAA-THA in correcting infrapelvic obliquity and improving hip function in specific patient subtypes.

## Key findings

- DAA-THA significantly improves Harris scores and corrects pelvic obliquity and leg length discrepancy.
- Type IB patients showed the greatest functional improvement and correction of pelvic tilt.
- Acetabular cup position remained stable over time across all subtypes.

## Abstract

Abnormal pelvic coronal plane obliquity is a potential risk factor for cup instability during total hip arthroplasty. This study investigates the clinical function, acetabular cup position, leg length discrepancy, and improvement of obliquity in patients with infrapelvic obliquity after treatment with total hip arthroplasty in the direct anterior approach (DAA‐THA).

A total of 987 patients who underwent DAA‐THA in the supine position from January 2017 to January 2021 were retrospectively analyzed, and 158 of them were included. The infrapelvic obliquity was classified into two types according to the direction of obliquity. Type I is when the pelvis tilts to the side of the affected lower limb, while type II is pelvic obliquity on the side of the healthy lower limb. Cases were further classified into two subtypes according to the angle of pelvic obliquity obtained: 0°–3° for type A; ≥ 3° for type B. Clinical observation and follow‐up were carried out at 1 day, 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, 1 year, and the last clinic visit (average 29 months). Standing hip radiographs were taken to measure the cup position, leg length discrepancy (LLD) and pelvic obliquity. The Harris score was used to evaluate hip function before and after surgery. Repeated measure ANOVAs were applied to compare multiple time points within groups, while the Fisher's LSD test was used for pairwise comparisons between the means of multiple samples across groups.

As the degree of pelvic obliquity increased for each subtype, the pre‐operative Harris score decreased and pre‐operative LLD increased. The parameters of cup position remained stable over time for each subtype. After DAA‐THA, the Harris score improved significantly and the degree of pelvic obliquity and LLD improved for each subtype (p < 0.001). Although the last follow‐up showed the lowest Harris score and the poorest recovery of pelvic tilt and LLD, type IB patients demonstrated the greater improvement compared to the other types.

DAA‐THA in supine position not only significantly improves the hip function of patients with infrapelvic obliquity, but also corrects pelvic obliquity and leg length discrepancy, while maintaining stable acetabular components. For patients with infrapelvic obliquity, in which the pelvis is oblique on the affected side and the angle is more than 3°, the degree of functional improvement and correction is the greatest.

This study identifies the positive effects of DAA‐THA on clinical function and prosthesis positioning in patients with infrapelvic obliquity.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** cup (MESH:C536557), Obliquity (MESH:C537736), LLD (MESH:D007870)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12146136/full.md

## References

46 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12146136/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12146136