Do Ceramic Femoral Heads Reduce Taper Fretting Corrosion in Hip Arthroplasty? A Retrieval Study

Background Previous studies regarding modular head-neck taper corrosion were largely based on cobalt chrome (CoCr) alloy femoral heads. Less is known about head-neck taper corrosion with ceramic femoral heads. Questions/purposes We asked (1) whether ceramic heads resulted in less taper corrosion than CoCr heads; (2) what device and patient factors influence taper fretting corrosion; and (3) whether the mechanism of taper fretting corrosion in ceramic heads differs from that in CoCr heads. Methods One hundred femoral head-stem pairs were analyzed for evidence of fretting and corrosion using a visual scoring technique based on the severity and extent of fretting and corrosion damage observed at the taper. A matched cohort design was used in which 50 ceramic head-stem pairs were matched with 50 CoCr head-stem pairs based on implantation time, lateral offset, stem design, and flexural rigidity. Results Fretting and corrosion scores were lower for the stems in the ceramic head cohort (p = 0.03). Stem alloy (p = 0.004) and lower stem flexural rigidity (Spearman’s rho = −0.32, p = 0.02) predicted stem fretting and corrosion damage in the ceramic head cohort but not in the metal head cohort. The mechanism of mechanically assisted crevice corrosion was similar in both cohorts although in the case of ceramic femoral heads, only one of the two surfaces (the male metal taper) engaged in the oxide abrasion and repassivation process. Conclusions The results suggest that by using a ceramic femoral head, CoCr fretting and corrosion from the modular head-neck taper may be mitigated but not eliminated. Clinical Relevance The findings of this study support further study of the role of ceramic heads in potentially reducing femoral taper corrosion.


Introduction
Taper corrosion in THA was identified as a clinical concern in the 1980s to 1990s [2,5,7,14,15,24,25] and was believed to have been addressed. However, implant corrosion has recently been reintroduced as a clinical issue [3,8,[16][17][18]. There is consensus that the mechanism of taper corrosion is best characterized as mechanically assisted crevice corrosion [7,14,22]. Although fundamentally a crevice corrosion problem, mechanical fretting and wear also contribute by disrupting the atomically thin, protective oxide layers that border the crevice environment [7,9,14]. When the underlying metallic substrate is exposed by mechanical damage to the in vivo environment, rapid repassivation of the metal surfaces alters its voltage and acidifies the solution trapped in the taper crevice. Thus, the electrochemistry of the head and stem alloys as well as the solution chemistry of the taper crevice are determinants of taper corrosion [7,14]. For the modular head-neck connection, the crevice is the space between two opposing taper surfaces (ie, where no asperity-asperity contact is present and solution can reside). This is effectively a cracklike fluid-filled environment in electrochemical contact with the outside solution, wherein large changes in solution chemistry and crevice-type corrosion reactions can occur.
Taper corrosion depends on the dimensions and shape of the crevice at the taper interface and the complex interplay of metallurgical, chemical, electrical, and tribological factors [7,14,22]. A previous, multicenter retrieval analysis of head-neck taper corrosion by Goldberg et al. [9] documented that the combination of dissimilar alloys, metallurgical condition of the alloys, implantation time, and flexural rigidity of the femoral neck were predictors of corrosion of the neck and head. Implantation time and dissimilar alloys were also identified as important variables in a related retrieval study [5]. More recently, a multicenter retrieval study of modular taper connections in contemporary metal-on-metal (MOM) bearings also found that implantation time, lateral offset, femoral stem modularity, and dissimilar alloys were predictors of taper corrosion [11]. Evaluation of corrosion in the past, and for the current study, is conducted using a visual scoring method with a scale of 1 through 4 where 1 is least severe and 4 is most severe.
To date, the body of knowledge regarding taper corrosion, including the majority of previous retrieval studies of retrieved tapers, is based on cobalt chrome (CoCr) alloy femoral heads on a metallic stem in either metal-on-polyethylene (M-PE) or MOM bearings. Less is known about taper corrosion with ceramic heads on a metallic stem in ceramic-on-polyethylene (C-PE) or ceramic-on-ceramic (COC) bearings or how stem taper corrosion differs between ceramic and CoCr heads [10,13,25]. Previous studies are limited to a case study [25], studies with significant confounding factors (ie, additional modular junctions) [13], or limited to components and designs that are no longer commercially relevant [10].
In the current study we asked (1) whether ceramic heads resulted in less taper corrosion than CoCr heads; (2) what device and patient factors exert a significant influence on taper fretting corrosion; and (3) whether the mechanism of taper fretting corrosion in ceramic heads differs from that in CoCr heads.

Study Design, Cohort Selection, and Clinical Information
We based our matched cohort design on the combined retrieval collections of two academic engineering-based programs working in collaboration with 12 clinical revision centers from the northeast, midwest, south, and western regions of the United States. Retrievals were collected as part of a 12-year ongoing institutional review boardapproved revision and retrieval program. An a priori power analysis was conducted and revealed that a sample size of 100 was more than sufficient to detect a difference in corrosion score of 1 between the metal and ceramic cohorts (power = 99.9%). Thus, a total sample size of 100 retrieval cases was judged to be adequate based on this analysis and previous research involving taper corrosion in MOM retrievals [11], in which researchers detected significant differences in taper corrosion between study groups using a sample size of approximately 100 retrievals.
From our combined interinstitutional database of over 2000 THAs, we first identified 96 sets of matched ceramic head/femoral stem taper pairs. The identified sets were restricted to ceramic heads that were produced by the same supplier (Ceramtec GmbH, Plochingen, Germany) and distributed by major manufacturers in North America.
According to the supplier, the geometric specifications of the femoral taper angle as well as surface roughness that mates with the bore of the ceramic head have remained unchanged since the 1980s. However, the ceramic material has evolved over time such that the 96 sets included two grades of alumina (Biolox and Biolox 1 forte; Ceramtec GmbH, Plochingen, Germany) and zirconia-toughened alumina (Biolox 1 delta) ceramic heads. The transition from Biolox 1 to Biolox 1 forte grades of alumina took place in 1995 and Biolox 1 delta was clinically introduced in 2003 in Europe and 2005 in the United States. From this set, we selected the ceramic-metal taper cohort. Because previous studies have shown implantation time to be one of the most important variables related to taper corrosion [5,7,9], we selected the ceramic-metal taper cohort to consist of the 50 sets (Biolox 1 [n = 5], Biolox 1 forte [n = 30], and Biolox 1 delta [n = 15]) with the longest implantation time and which could be matched with a metal-metal taper cohort (described subsequently). The ceramic-metal taper cohort included both COC and/or C-PE bearings ( Table 1). The majority of the components for this study were uncemented (94 of 100) with the cemented components having COC (n = 1), C-PE (n = 2), and M-PE (n = 3) bearing couples. Given that cement was present in three samples for both study groups, cement is not considered to be a confounding factor for this study. We excluded 11 prostheses with a modular femoral stem from the study because of previous research suggesting that modular tapers were associated with increased femoral head corrosion in MOM bearings [11].
We identified the matched cohort of 50 metal-metal tapered head-stem components from M-PE bearings ( Table 2). The metal femoral head in the metal-metal taper cohort was always composed of CoCr. The metallic head and stem material compositions of all samples were confirmed using an x-ray fluorescence detector (Niton XL3t GOLDD+; Thermo Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA). Devices in the ceramic-metal taper cohort were matched to create the metal-metal taper cohort based on the following three criteria (in order of importance) based on significant variables published in previous retrieval studies of taper corrosion [9,11]: (1) implantation time (most important); (2) stem neck flexural rigidity; and (3) lateral offset (least important). Although not specifically matched for, the resulting cohorts had similar head diameters (median = 32 mm and mean = 33 mm for both cohorts). In this study, the CoCr heads had the same manufacturer as the stems they were implanted with, eliminating manufacturer mixing as a confounding factor.
Stem flexural rigidity was calculated using the equation used by Goldberg and colleagues [9]. The flexural rigidity of the stems was calculated using the Young's modulus (E) of the alloy multiplied by the second moment of area (I = p[d] 4 /64, where d = diameter of stem at the distal contact point of the head taper). The diameters of the necks were measured by two independent observers (SBK, JAH) and were assumed to be circular. The combined lateral offset of the stem and head was obtained by tracing component markings, patient records, and component dimensional measurements or directly from the manufacturer-supplied design tables. When possible, we matched stem flexural rigidity and offset in the two cohorts using the identical stem design and size (Tables 1, 2). The stems were fabricated from a proprietary titanium alloy (54%; TMZF; Stryker Orthopaedics, Mahwah, NJ, USA) having an elastic modulus of approximately 80 GPa, Ti-6Al-4V alloy (29%; 110 GPa elastic modulus) or from a CoCr alloy (17%; 200 GPa elastic modulus).
We considered only monolithic femoral stems with a single taper interface for the head. We excluded four ceramic heads with metal sleeves from the study. Likewise, none of the CoCr heads in the matched metal head cohort included an inner modular taper adapter or sleeve.
In addition to the retrieved components, clinical data (implantation time, age, sex, body mass index [BMI], UCLA activity score, and reason for implant revision) were collected for all patients in the ceramic-metal and metal-metal taper cohorts (Tables 1 and 2, respectively). For the ceramic head cohort, the average implantation time was 3.3 ± 3.7 years (range, 0.5-18 years), the mean patient age at implantation was 52 ± 10 years, 17 of 50 (34%) were female, the mean BMI was 30 ± 7 kg/m 2 , and the mean UCLA activity score was 6 ± 2. For the metal head cohort, the average implantation time was 3.2 ± 3.8 years (range, 0.5-17 years), the mean patient age at implantation was 57 ± 14 years, 25 of 50 (50%) were female, the mean BMI was 30 ± 7 kg/m 2 , and the mean UCLA activity score was 5 ± 2 ( Table 2). There was no significant difference in the implantation time (p = 0.71), sex (p = 0.11), BMI (p = 0.91), or UCLA activity levels (p = 0.65) between the ceramic and metal head cohorts. However, there was a significantly (p = 0.03) greater age in patients with a metal head as compared with the ceramic head cohort. The most frequently reported reasons for revision in both the ceramic and metal head cohorts were infection and loosening (Tables 1, 2). According to the medical records, none of the heads or stems in either the ceramic-metal or metal-metal taper cohorts was revised as a result of an adverse local tissue reaction.

Modular Interface Damage Evaluation
Devices were cleaned in accordance with institutional procedures. The CoCr head and neck tapers were inspected visually and under a stereomicroscope equipped with a digital camera (Leica DFC490; Leica Microsystems,      Wetzlar, Germany) for evidence of fretting and corrosion. Fretting, defined by Szolwinski and Farris [23] as a contact damage process resulting from micromotions of interfacing metals, was identified as scratching perpendicular to machining lines on the taper and/or wearing away of the machining lines. Corrosion was identified as white haziness (indicative of intergranular crevice corrosion), discoloration, and/or blackened debris [6].

Scoring System for Fretting and Corrosion
Composite fretting and corrosion damage at the modular CoCr head and metal stem interfaces were characterized using a previously published 4-point scoring technique [12] with a score of 1 indicating minimal fretting or corrosion (fretting on \ 10% surface and no corrosion damage); 2 indicating mild damage (fretting on [ 10% surface and/ or corrosion attack confined to one or more small areas); 3 indicating moderate damage (fretting [ 30% and/or aggressive local corrosion attack with corrosion debris); and 4 indicating severe damage (fretting over majority [[50%] of mating surface with severe corrosion attack and abundant corrosion debris). We analyzed metal transfer to the inner taper of the ceramic heads using a similar 4-point scoring technique with a score of 1 indicating minimal metal transfer (\ 10% of the taper surface), 2 indicating metal transfer over 10%, 3 indicating metal transfer over 30%, and 4 indicating metal transfer over more than 50% of the inner head taper. We also inspected and noted the presence or absence on the inferior face of the femoral heads and the stems outside of the taper junction of dark, adherent corrosion deposits as described by Urban and colleagues [25]. The scoring plan for the head and stem tapers was developed in collaboration with a consultant biostatistician (EL). Components were randomized using a random number generator in Microsoft Excel (Microsoft Inc, Redmond, WA, USA; components were scored from the lowest to highest random number generated) and scored independently by the same three investigators (SBK, JAH, DWM). In the event of disagreement between the scores, the three investigators convened to adjudicate the discrepancy and arrive at a consensus score for the taper. The investigators were blinded to the cohort status of the stems during scoring, but it was not possible to visually score the two head cohorts in a blinded fashion.

Scanning Electron Microscopy of Stems Interfacing With Ceramic Heads
Representative TMZF, Ti-6-4, and CoCr alloy stems, each with a visual score of 2 corresponding to the median value for the ceramic cohort, were selected for evaluation using scanning electron microscopy (SEM; JEOL 5600, Peabody, MA, USA) and energy dispersive analysis of x-rays (EDS; Princeton Gamma-Tech, Princeton, NJ, USA). Implants were either placed directly into the SEM with no additional preparation or, if too large, were sectioned distal to the taper in the neck region using a slow-speed diamond sectioning saw with water as the lubricant and then rinsed in distilled water and dried. Imaging was performed in both the backscattered and secondary electron mode and, when appropriate, EDS (Princeton Gamma-Tech) was used for elemental analysis. The primary focus of this analysis was to characterize the nature of the male taper surfaces and the type of fretting corrosion damage present.

Statistical Analysis
Preliminary evaluation of the visual corrosion damage scoring data demonstrated a nonnormal distribution. Hence, nonparametric statistical analyses were performed using statistical software (JMP 10.0; SAS Institute, Cary, NC, USA). Mann-Whitney U, Kruskal-Wallis (with post hoc Dunn tests when necessary), and Wilcoxon tests were used to assess differences in taper damage grouped by categorical parameters (femoral head material, bearing type [for the ceramic cohort only], and ceramic material formulation [alumina versus zirconia-toughened alumina]). Spearman's rank order correlation was used to identify correlations between continuous variables (implantation time, stem flexural rigidity, lateral offset, and head size). The level of significance chosen for all statistical analyses was p \ 0.05.

Results
Fretting and corrosion scores were lower for the stems in the ceramic-metal when compared with the metal-metal taper cohort (p = 0.03; Fig. 1). Evidence of fretting and corrosion, consistent with a score of 2 or greater, was observed in 42 of 50 (84%) stems in the ceramic-metal and 42 of 50 (84%) stems in the metal-metal taper cohort. The median damage score for the stems in the ceramic-metal taper cohort was 2 (Figs. 1, 2), whereas for stems in the metal-metal taper cohort, the median score was 3 (Figs. 1, 3). We observed dark corrosion deposits outside the head-neck taper junctions in three of 50 (6%) of the metal-metal taper cohort and zero of 50 (0%) of the ceramic-metal taper cohort.
Both stem alloy (p = 0.004; Kruskal-Wallis test with post hoc Dunn Test; Fig. 4) and decreased stem flexural rigidity (Spearman's rho = À0.35, p = 0.01) were predictors of stem fretting and corrosion damage for the ceramic-metal taper cohort however, these variables did not have an effect for the metal-metal taper cohort (Fig. 4). Stem corrosion for the ceramic-metal taper cohort was not significantly affected by implantation time (p = 0.46), lateral offset (p = 0.35), head size (p = 0.26), type of ceramic bearing (p = 0.82), or the ceramic material formulation (p = 0.93). However, these tests were generally underpowered (power \ 25%). The only variable in this study that was a significant predictor of the metal transfer score inside the ceramic heads was decreased flexural rigidity (Spearman's rho = À0.35, p = 0.01). For the metal head cohort, none of the patient or device variables in this study was a significant predictor of the stem corrosion for the metal-metal taper cohort. Patient weight was positively correlated with stem fretting and corrosion scores in the ceramic head cohort (Spearman's rho = 0.46; p = 0.002), whereas only a trend was observed in the metal head cohort (Spearman's rho = 0.26; p = 0.08). In the metal head cohort, patient age was negatively correlated with stem fretting and corrosion scores (Spearman's rho = À0.36; p = 0.01); however, no correlation was observed in the ceramic cohort (Spearman's rho = 0.08; p = 0.59). Patient sex, implantation time, and activity scores were not associated with higher or lower stem fretting and corrosion scores in either cohort (p [ 0.05).
The mechanism of mechanically assisted crevice corrosion was similar in the metal and ceramic head cohorts, although in the case of ceramic femoral heads, only one of the two surfaces (the male metal taper) engaged in the oxide abrasion and repassivation process. SEM analysis    showed damage on each implant that was reflective of the type of metallic surface topography present. Interestingly, the surface topography for tapers was highly variable based on alloy (Co-based or Ti-based) and manufacturer. The taper surfaces were either finely machined (TMZF; Fig. 5A) or with machined grooves present (both Ti-6Al-4V, Fig. 5 B-C, and CoCr, Fig. 5D-E). The geometry of the grooves varied with design in terms of grooves per length and groove depth. For example, in Figures 5D and 5E, both implants are Co-Cr-Mo based, but Figure 5E shows tightly spaced grooves approximately 150 lm apart and roughly 60 to 100 lm deep, whereas in Figure 5D, the grooves are approximately 500 lm apart and 50 lm deep. The fretting corrosion damage seen in these tapers is intermittently distributed over the tapers and where grooves are present occur only at the top of the groove. With deep grooves, debris can accumulate (Fig. 5E) adjacent to the fretting damage. For the device in Figure 5A, the majority of fretting corrosion damage is seen in the proximal taper region (lower right of micrograph) indicating rim loading. Evidence of fretting damage and corrosion debris (dark regions) was observed on titanium alloy surfaces (Fig. 6A-B). Different types of machining grooves on cobalt alloy surfaces (Fig. 6C-D) exhibited different appearances. In one case (Fig. 6C), the damage seen has a distinct (solely) corrosion-based appearance, whereas another case (Fig. 6D) showed evidence of both fretting and corrosion damage.

Discussion
Fretting initiated crevice corrosion observed in tapers is a complex problem and the severity is dependent on multiple factors. Retrieval studies that isolate variables in devices and patients can be designed to identify device and patient factors that aggravate or mitigate corrosion damage at the tapers. This matched cohort retrieval study was undertaken to analyze stem taper corrosion with ceramic heads as compared with CoCr heads. We theorized that ceramic femoral heads, which are electrical insulators, would lead to lower stem taper corrosion than previously reported with CoCr femoral heads; indeed, this appears to be the case. We found that decreased stem flexural rigidity and stem alloy predicted stem corrosion with modular ceramic femoral heads but not with CoCr heads. There was no difference in the mechanism of fretting corrosion between the ceramic and metal cohorts besides the fact that only the stem taper surface plays a role in the corrosion damage that occurs in the ceramic cohort.
This study had limitations. We used a matched cohort study design that was adequately powered to detect differences between the ceramic-metal and metal-metal taper cohorts, but the sample size was not sufficient to pick up correlations between taper design and secondary effects such as implantation time, which were not apparent in either cohort. The study was primarily designed to detect a difference of 1 in corrosion scores between junctions with ceramic-metal and metal-metal interfaces. However, the mean differences of fretting and corrosion scores when analyzing the device and patient factors were approximately one-fourth of what the study was designed to detect, and thus would require an unrealistically large sample size to be sufficiently powered. Because this was a secondary study question, we acknowledged that the question would be underpowered. This study also shares the same limitation of all retrieval studies, namely that they are based on analysis of clinical failures that do not necessarily reflect the population of well-functioning implants in the unrevised patient population. However, the presence of taper corrosion in this series was not associated with the reasons for revision for any of the components. This study focused on ceramic femoral heads by a single supplier with a consistent design for the past 30 years. Although we included different types of ceramic materials used in different types of bearings, we confirmed these variables did not influence the results. We also accounted for differences in stem surface finish and alloy composition between the cohorts by the matching protocol. Thus, as suggested in a study of taper corrosion with zirconia heads [10], our findings are not generalizable to other ceramic head suppliers and femoral stem designs outside of this study. Furthermore, we examined retrievals in which the only source of modularity with a metallic component was the head-stem interface. Therefore, the results of this study likewise do not apply to THA systems with multiple sources of modularity. Our results were also limited in that our methodology to assess the extent of corrosion was categorical and subjective. However, our methodology was consistent with the approach of other investigations in which corrosion and fretting of modular metallic interfaces were assessed [9]. Furthermore, it is recognized that the fretting and corrosion scoring technique does not necessarily correlate with the volume of metallic debris generated at a modular interface. Taper analyses to quantify material loss at the ceramic-stem modular connection were beyond the scope of this study.
This study demonstrates that mechanically assisted crevice corrosion can also occur in ceramic head-metal neck devices, although to a lesser extent than in CoCr head-metal neck devices. The taper designs used in these junctions were varied, but all showed evidence of some fretting and corrosion present, as expected from any modular taper connection. Despite four decades of clinical use, few studies have investigated taper corrosion involving modular ceramic heads [10,13,25], making comparisons with our study difficult. Urban and colleagues [25] documented one case of taper corrosion in an Autophor (Mittelmeier; Smith & Nephew, Memphis, TN, USA) hip prosthesis consisting of a CoCr femoral stem and an alumina ceramic femoral head and concluded that the corrosion products in the periprosthetic tissue and within the taper appeared to be similar to those with a CoCr head and stem. Hallab and coworkers [10] examined fretting corrosion in CoCr-CoCr and CoCr-zirconia ceramic stem-head tapers in vitro to test the hypothesis that the harder ceramic surface would result in greater fretting corrosion debris from a CoCr stem as compared with a Fig. 6A-D Backscattered electron micrographs of (A) TMZF, (B) Ti-6Al-4V, (C) Co-Cr-Mo, and (D) CoNiCrMo alloy tapers used in conjunction with ceramic femoral heads. Each image shows fretting damage and some corrosion debris present. In C, the damage has a distinctly corrosion-like appearance emanating from a machining ridge.
CoCr head and stem. Contrary to their hypothesis (and similar to the results of this retrieval study), the CoCr-CoCr head-stem taper generated three-to 11-fold greater metal release than the CoCr-zirconia taper combination, but the authors cautioned against overgeneralization of their results to other head-stem designs. The manufacturer of the zirconia heads in Hallab et al.'s [10] study, St Gobain Desmarquest (Evreux Cedex, France), ultimately withdrew their product from the orthopaedic market after a worldwide recall in 2001 and they are no longer in clinical use in orthopaedics [4]. More recently, in a retrieval study of a series of titanium alloy S-ROM femoral stems (DePuy Orthopaedics, Warsaw, IN, USA), Huot Carlson et al. [13] observed less proximal femoral stem taper corrosion for cases with a ceramic-metal taper interface as opposed to cases with metal-metal taper interfaces. However, details about the design or manufacture of the ceramic heads in the S-ROM series were not reported, making direct comparisons to this study difficult [13].
The most important design and patient factors predicting increased fretting and corrosion scores of the ceramic head cohort in this study were stem material, flexural rigidity, and body weight. Previously, both in vitro and in vivo studies have found similar results [9,13,16,18,22]. We did not find lateral offset or sex to be a predictor of corrosion, which is comparable to what Hout Carlson et al. recently found [13]. Goldberg et al. [9] found that lateral offset was a predictor of corrosion; however, this factor did not have an effect when the confounding factors of flexural rigidity and implantation were considered. Head size was not a predictor for corrosion in the current study and by Hout Carlson et al. [13], which differs from a prior study that found an association between corrosion and femoral head size [11]. A post hoc power analysis revealed that this study was underpowered to detect the differences observed between head sizes (power = 21%). The clinical impact of the associated corrosion debris from these interfaces for implants with femoral heads less than 36 mm remains unclear at this point. Tissue samples were unavailable to determine the effects of these corrosion products locally and systemically.
This study provides new insight on the mechanisms of taper fretting corrosion using ceramic as an alternative to CoCr alloy femoral heads. The basic mechanism of mechanically assisted crevice corrosion was the same with the exception being that, in the case of a ceramic femoral head, only one of the two surfaces (ie, the male metal taper) engaged in the oxide abrasion and repassivation process. This, in and of itself, will lower the overall extent of corrosion. Other potential differences between taper fretting corrosion behavior could be the result of how the male taper surface was prepared. The machining topography of the metal taper appears to localize damage to the peaks of the machining grooves where contact is made with the ceramic head. However, we accounted for differences in surface topography in the two study cohorts by matching not only alloy, but stem manufacturer, where possible. Thus, the lower corrosion scores we observed between the ceramicmetal and metal-metal (not MOM, metal on metal) taper cohorts cannot be attributed to differences in surface topography. Detailed measurements of stem surface topography were also beyond the scope of the present study.
Previously, ceramic femoral heads have been discussed in the clinical literature solely in the context of an alternative bearing surface to reduce wear [1,21]. This study has potentially important implications for modular component selection by surgeons who are concerned with Co and Cr debris release from the head-neck interface and the risk of adverse local tissue reactions [3,8,[16][17][18]. Our results suggest that by using a ceramic femoral head, Co and Cr fretting and corrosion from the modular head-neck taper may be mitigated, although not completely eliminated. However, implant component selection is but one factor contributing to taper corrosion and metal debris production from modular interfaces in vivo. Taper impaction technique, engagement of the modular taper interface in a clean and dry environment, and the use of matching components are all technical factors that influence taper fretting and corrosion regardless of whether the femoral head is fabricated from CoCr or ceramic [19,20]. Our research suggests that there could be a potentially new focus in ceramic component research in hip arthroplasty, beyond wear and tribology, to better understand the role of ceramics in mitigating modular taper corrosion.