Abstract
Background
Total knee replacement (TKR) is an effective operation for many patients, however approximately 20% of patients experience chronic pain and functional limitations in the months and years following their TKR. If modifiable pre-operative risk factors could be identified, this would allow patients to be targeted with individualised care to optimise these factors prior to surgery and potentially improve outcomes. Psychosocial factors have also been found to be important in predicting outcomes in the first 12 months after TKR, however their impact on long-term outcomes is unknown. This study aimed to identify pre-operative psychosocial predictors of patient-reported and clinician-assessed outcomes at one year and five years after primary TKR.
Patients and methods
266 patients listed for a Triathlon TKR because of osteoarthritis were recruited from pre-operative assessment clinics at one orthopaedic centre. Knee pain and function were assessed pre-operatively and at one and five years post-operative using the WOMAC Pain score, WOMAC Function score and American Knee Society Score (AKSS) Knee score. Pre-operative depression, anxiety, catastrophizing, pain self-efficacy and social support were assessed using patient-reported outcome measures. Statistical analyses were conducted using multiple linear regression and mixed effect linear regression, and adjusted for confounding variables.
Results
Higher anxiety was a predictor of worse self-reported pain at one year post-operative. Higher anxiety and catastrophizing were predictive of worse self-reported function at one year post-operative. No psychosocial factors were associated with any outcome measures at five years post-operative. Analysis of change over time found that patients with higher pain self-efficacy had lower pre-operative pain and experienced less improvement in pain up to one year. Higher pain self-efficacy was associated with less improvement in the AKSS up to one year post-operative but more improvement between one and five years post-operative.
Conclusion
This study found that pre-operative anxiety and catastrophizing influence outcomes at one year after TKR, highlighting that some patients may benefit from targeted psychological interventions to reduce these risk factors and improve outcomes. However, none of the psychosocial variables assessed were predictors of outcomes at five years post-operative, suggesting that the negative effects of anxiety and catastrophizing on outcome do not persist in the longer term.