与住院翻修TKA相比,门诊翻修TKA不会增加重复翻修或医疗和手术并发症的发生率。

IF 4.4 2区 医学 Q1 ORTHOPEDICS Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research® Pub Date : 2025-02-05 DOI:10.1097/CORR.0000000000003386
Kevin D Plancher, Carlo Mannina, Elias Schwartz, Karen K Briggs, Stephanie C Petterson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:改进型TKA的发生率正在上升。鉴于这种需求的增加,在门诊环境中进行改良TKA的安全性和有效性是很重要的。问题/目的:(1)与住院患者相比,在门诊接受翻修性TKA的患者是否更有可能在1年内进行重复翻修?(2)与住院翻修TKA患者相比,门诊翻修TKA患者是否更有可能增加再入院率、麻醉下操作(MUA)和医疗并发症?方法:使用现行程序术语代码或ICD-9和ICD-10诊断代码,在PearlDiver Mariner数据库中识别门诊或住院接受单组分修正TKA的患者。PearlDiver数据库是一个收费的保险患者记录数据库,包含2010年至2022年的1.65亿个人患者记录,并允许对患者进行长期跟踪。各组倾向评分匹配,以尽量减少选择偏倚的风险,即有较大合并症的患者将在住院环境中接受治疗。按年龄、性别和Elixhauser共病指数(ECI)按1:4的比例进行倾向匹配。倾向匹配后,住院组共纳入30924例接受单组分修正TKA的患者,门诊组共纳入7731例患者。结果测量包括1年的重复翻修率、90天的再入院率、并发症包括深静脉血栓形成、肺栓塞、输血、伤口并发症、假体周围关节感染和90天的MUA。分类变量比较采用卡方分析,连续变量比较采用独立样本t检验。由于任何观察到的有利于门诊翻修TKA的差异都可能是由于选择偏倚,没有生物学上合理的解释,门诊手术导致较少的医疗或手术并发症,因此研究结果被解释为非劣效性分析,表明门诊翻修TKA并不劣于住院翻修TKA,即使数据表明门诊翻修TKA比住院翻修TKA有潜在优势。结果:门诊组1年重复翻修发生率不高于住院组(5%[7731例中的359例]vs . 5%[30,924例中的1606例];P = 0.05)。门诊翻修TKA组90天再入院发生率不高于住院翻修TKA组(8%[7731例中的643例]对15%[30,924例中的4561例];P < 0.001)。门诊翻修TKA组与住院翻修TKA组相比,所有内科和外科并发症的发生率均不高。结论:在本研究中,门诊翻修TKA与住院翻修TKA相比,没有更高的重复翻修、再入院和医疗或手术并发症发生率。然而,我们并不认为门诊翻修TKA适用于所有患者,也不认为它比住院患者更安全,因为尽管在这个大数据集中倾向匹配,但仍存在一些未测量的混淆。我们的研究结果表明,通过仔细的患者选择,并发症和翻修率可以与住院翻修手术相媲美,同时也可以为患者腾出住院资源,让他们从中受益。在确定修正TKA的适当设置时,考虑患者的整体健康状况和医疗合并症是至关重要的。未来的研究应探索患者选择标准和结果,包括患者满意度、疼痛评分和门诊与住院患者翻修TKA的成本节约,以完善最佳实践并指导临床决策。证据等级:III级,治疗性研究。
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Outpatient Revision TKA Does Not Increase Incidence of Repeat Revision or Medical and Surgical Complications Compared With Inpatient Revision TKA.

Background: The incidence of revision TKA is escalating. The safety and efficacy of performing revision TKA in an outpatient setting is important given this increased demand.

Questions/purposes: (1) Are patients who undergo revision TKA in an outpatient setting more likely to undergo a repeat revision within 1 year compared with patients undergoing revision TKA in an inpatient setting? (2) Are patients who undergo outpatient revision TKA more likely to have increased hospital readmissions, manipulation under anesthesia (MUA), and medical complications compared with patients undergoing revision TKA in an inpatient setting?

Methods: Patients who underwent single-component revision TKA in either an outpatient or inpatient setting were identified in the PearlDiver Mariner database using Current Procedural Terminology codes or ICD-9 and ICD-10 diagnosis codes. The PearlDiver database is a for-fee insurance patient records database that contains > 165 million individual patient records from 2010 to 2022 and allows patients to be tracked over time. Groups were propensity score-matched to minimize the risk of selection bias that patients with greater comorbidities would be treated in an inpatient setting. Propensity matching was performed using a 1:4 ratio by age, gender, and Elixhauser Comorbidity Index (ECI). After propensity matching, a total of 30,924 patients who underwent single-component revision TKA were included in the inpatient group and 7731 patients were included in the outpatient group. Outcome measures included rates of repeat revision at 1 year, hospital readmission at 90 days, and complications including deep vein thrombosis, pulmonary embolus, blood transfusion, wound complications, periprosthetic joint infection, and MUA at 90 days. Chi-square analyses were used to compare categorical variables, and independent samples t-tests were used to compare continuous variables. Because any observed differences favoring outpatient revision TKA were likely due to selection bias with no biologically plausible explanation for outpatient surgery resulting in fewer medical or surgical complications, the findings were interpreted as a noninferiority analysis, indicating that outpatient revision TKA is not inferior to inpatient revision TKA even if the data indicated a potential advantage for outpatient revision TKA over inpatient revision TKA.

Results: The 1-year incidence of repeat revision was no higher in the outpatient group than the inpatient group (5% [359 of 7731] versus 5% [1606 of 30,924]; p = 0.05). The incidence of 90-day hospital readmission was no higher in the outpatient revision TKA group compared with the inpatient revision TKA group (8% [643 of 7731] versus 15% [4561 of 30,924]; p < 0.001). The incidence of all medical and surgical complications investigated was no higher in the outpatient revision TKA group compared with the inpatient revision TKA group.

Conclusion: In this study, outpatient revision TKA did not have a higher incidence of repeat revision, hospital readmission, and medical or surgical complications compared with performing revision TKA in an inpatient setting. However, we do not suggest that revision TKA in the outpatient setting is appropriate for all patients or that it is safer than in the inpatient setting, as there was some unmeasured confounding despite propensity matching in this large data set. Our findings suggest that with careful patient selection, complication and revision rates can be comparable to those seen with inpatient revision surgery while also freeing up inpatient resources for patients who would benefit from them. When determining the appropriate setting for revision TKA, it is crucial to consider the patient's overall health and medical comorbidities. Future studies should explore patient selection criteria and outcomes including patient satisfaction, pain scores, and cost savings of outpatient versus inpatient revision TKA to refine best practices and guide clinical decision-making.

Level of evidence: Level III, therapeutic study.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
11.90%
发文量
722
审稿时长
2.5 months
期刊介绍: Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research® is a leading peer-reviewed journal devoted to the dissemination of new and important orthopaedic knowledge. CORR® brings readers the latest clinical and basic research, along with columns, commentaries, and interviews with authors.
期刊最新文献
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