Trends in comorbidities and complications among patients undergoing elective total hip and knee arthroplasty in the USA

Lisa Reisinger (First author), Crispiana Cozowicz (Co-author), Jashvant Poeran, Haoyan Zhong, Alex Illescas, Periklis Giannakis, Jiabin Liu, Stavros G. Memtsoudis* (Last author)

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalOriginal Articlepeer-review

1 Citation (Web of Science)

Abstract

BackgroundDemand for total hip and knee arthroplasty procedures continues to rise. Ongoing changes in surgical care and patient populations require continued monitoring of outcome trends. Using nationwide data from the USA, we aimed to describe updated trends in patient and peri-operative care characteristics as well as complications among total hip and knee arthroplasty recipients.MethodsWe included patients who underwent elective primary total hip or knee arthroplasty between 2016 and 2021. Trends were reported for a variety of patient and peri-operative care characteristics as well as complications.ResultsWe identified significant trends in patient and peri-operative care characteristics as well as the incidence of complications. While patient median age increased, demographic composition remained consistent over the time period studied. There was a shift towards outpatient total hip and knee arthroplasty procedures, with one in five performed in the outpatient setting in 2021; the median duration of hospital stay decreased by 1 day over the time period for both procedures. Parallel increasing trends of total procedure numbers were found for patients without comorbidities and those with >= 3 comorbidities. Postoperative mortality increased significantly over the time period analysed for patients having total hip arthroplasty but not those having total knee arthroplasty (0.08 to 0.15 events per 1000 inpatient days, p = 0.037 and 0.09 to 0.33 events per 1000 inpatient days, p = 0.149, respectively).DiscussionCompared with previous trend analyses of patients having total hip or knee arthroplasty, the present study shows: an increasing rate of outpatient surgeries; increasing numbers of arthroplasty procedures in high comorbidity burden groups; and an increase incidence of certain serious postoperative complications.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)543-550
Number of pages8
JournalANAESTHESIA
Volume80
Issue number5
Early online dateJan 2025
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - Jan 2025

Keywords

  • Comorbidity
  • Complications
  • Hip arthroplasty
  • Knee arthroplasty
  • Outcome

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