Quality of life of persons with transfemoral amputation: Comparison of socket prostheses and osseointegrated prostheses

Philip Thomas Pospiech, Robert Wendlandt, Horst Heinrich Aschoff, Sibylle Ziegert, Arndt Peter Schulz*

*Corresponding author for this work

Abstract

Background: Until recently, no study had compared the quality of life of persons with transfemoral amputation treated with osseointegration to socket prosthesis users. Objectives: Comparison of quality of life in two types of prostheses users: a cohort of patients with osseointegration and patients equipped with a socket prosthesis who were group-matched for age, body mass index and mobility grade. Study design: A cross-sectional study that compared Methods: The quality of life of 39 participants (22 in the osseointegration group and 17 in the socket prosthesis group) was measured using the Questionnaire for Persons with Transfemoral Amputation (Q-TFA) and European Questionnaire 5-dimension 3-level (EQ-5D-3L) surveys. Results: Compared with the socket prosthesis group, the osseointegration group had a significantly higher ‘Global’ score (p = 0.022) and a significantly lower ‘Problem’ score (p < 0.001) of the Q-TFA. The ‘Mobility’ (p = 0.051) and ‘Use’ scores (p = 0.146) of the Q-TFA, the EQ-5D-3L index (p = 0.723), and EQ-5D visual analog scale (p = 0.497) showed no significant differences between groups. Conclusions: Patients with osseointegration experienced less prosthesis-associated problems than socket prosthesis users and had a higher prosthesis-associated quality of life when assessed with the Q-TFA. General quality of life, as assessed with the EQ-5D-3L, was not different between groups.

Original languageEnglish
JournalProsthetics and Orthotics International
ISSN0309-3646
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 25.08.2020

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