Abstract
Introduction
The American Joint Replacement Registry (AJRR) is the largest registry of total hip and knee arthroplasty (THA and TKA) procedures performed in the U.S. The National (Nationwide) Inpatient Sample (NIS) is a public database containing demographic estimates based on more than seven million hospitalizations annually. The purpose of this study was to analyze whether AJRR data is representative of the national experience with TJA as represented in NIS
Methods
Cohen's d effect sizes were computed to ascertain the magnitude of differences in demographics, hospital volume (in 50 patient increments), and geographic characteristics between the AJRR and NIS databases.
Results
The study included [NIS: 2,316,345 vs. AAOS-AJRR: 557,684] primary THA [NIS: 3,417,700 vs. AAOS-AJRR: 809,494] TKA procedures. The magnitude of distribution, as determined by the Cohen's d effect size, showed the proportions of AJRR and NIS patients were similar based on overall sex [THAs (d=0.03) and TKAs (d=0.02)] and age [THAs (d=0.17) and TKAs (d=0.12)]. Similarly, only small differences (d=0.34 or less) were identified between databases considering hospital volume and geography. AJRR was underrepresented in Southern regions and hospitals with low procedure volume and overrepresented in Northern hospitals and those with larger volume. Both NIS and AJRR followed a similar overall trend with a majority of procedures performed at hospitals with <50 cases per year.
Conclusion
Distributions across hospital volume, age, and geography were proportionally similar between the AJRR and NIS databases, which suggests that AJRR data is representative of national trends and may be generalized to the larger U.S. population.