In 1984, in reporting follow-up on 67 hips in 61 patients who underwen
t intertrochanteric osteotomies for osteoarthritis of the hip, we foun
d that between 12 and 15 years after osteotomy, 34% (23) of the 67 hip
s remained functional and the remainder had been converted to an arthr
oplasty. We now report on the fate of those osteotomies over a 25-year
period. Ten patients with 10 osteotomies did not require an arthropla
sty, having died without requiring conversion to total hip arthroplast
y at an average of 18.3 years after osteotomy (range: 11 to 24.1 years
). Two others were living at an average of 25.2 years after osteotomy
without requiring conversion. Thus, for 18% of the hips, no further hi
p surgery was performed. For the remaining 55 hips in 49 patients, the
osteotomy had served for an average of 9.8 years (range: 1.3 to 26.1
years) before requiring arthroplasty. The cumulative probability of os
teotomy survival was 57.8% (standard error: 6.0%) at 10 years, 20.0% (
standard error: 4.9%) at 20 years, and 5.7% (standard error: 2.9%) at
25 years by Kaplan-Meier survivorship analysis.