In November 2017, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) finalized the 2018 Medicare Outpatient Prospective Payment System rule that removed total knee arthroplasty (TKA) procedures from the Medicare inpatient-only (IPO) list of procedures. This action had significant and unexpected consequences. For several years, CMS has utilized a rule called the “Two-Midnight Rule” to define outpatient status for all procedures not on the IPO list. CMS made TKA subject to the “Two-Midnight Rule” in conjunction with the decision to move TKA off the IPO list. According to the “Two-Midnight Rule,” a hospital admission should be expected to span at least two midnights in order to be covered as an inpatient procedure. If it can be reliably expected that the patient will not require at least two midnights in the hospital, the “Two-Midnight Rule” suggests that the patient is considered an outpatient and is therefore subject to outpatient payment policies. Under prior guidance related to the “Two-Midnight Rule;” however, CMS also states that Medicare We looked at 3 different levels of the IPO rule impact on TKA for Medicare beneficiaries: a national comparison of fee for service (FFS) inpatient and outpatient classification for 2017 vs 2018; a survey of AAHKS surgeons completed in April of 2019; and an in-depth analysis of a large academic medical center experience. An analysis of change in inpatient classification of TKA patients over time, number of Quality Improvement Organization (QIO) audits, compliance solutions of organizations for the new rule and cost implications of those compliance solutions were evaluated.Introduction
Methods
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) removed total knee arthroplasty (TKA) from inpatient-only status in 2018. Our goal was to measure the adoption of outpatient TKAs, the impact on re-treatment rates, and the economic implications for hospitals. We utilized 100% national Medicare Part A fee-for-service (FFS) patient-level claims data for 2017–2018. We excluded DRG 469 TKAs since they are unlikely to be outpatient candidates, which left 257,107 primary TKAs in 2017 and 264,393 in 2018. We examined the time trend in monthly case volume and 30-day retreatment rate (defined as percent of patients having a second TKA within 30 days of the first. We calculated the loss in revenue for a hospital by multiplying the decrease in payment rate between inpatient and outpatient by the outpatient and total 2018 TKA volume.Introduction
Methods
Periprosthetic medial tibial plateau fractures (TPF) are rare but represent a serious complication in unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA). Most common treatment of these fractures is osteosynthesis with canulated screws or plates. The aim of this study was to evaluate these two different treatment options of periprosthetic fractures. The hypothesis was that osteosynthetic treatment with plates show significantly higher maximum fracture loads than fixation with cannulated screws.Introduction
Aim
Periprosthetic tibial plateau fractures (PTPF) represent a rare but serious complication in unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA). Although excellent long-term results have been reported with cemented UKA, surgeons continue to be interested in cementless fixation. The aim of the study was to compare fracture loads of cementless and cemented UKA. Tibial components of the Oxford UKA were implanted in six paired fresh-frozen tibiae. In one set surgery was performed with cement fixation and in the other cementless components were implanted. Loads were then applied under standardised conditions to fracture the specimens. Mean loads of 3.6 (0.7–6.9) kN led to fractures in the cemented group, whereas the tibiae fractured in the cementless group with a mean load of 1.9 (0.2–4.3) kN (p<
0.05). The loading capacity in tibiae with cementless components is significantly less compared to cemented fixation. Our results suggest that, patients with poor bone quality who are treated with a cementless UKA are at higher risk for periprosthetic fractures.
Between BMI and the maximum fracture loads inducing tibial plateau fractures a significant correlation could be proven for all tibiae (r=0.643).
We recommend special training and modified instruments for inexperienced surgeons to minimize the incidence of extended vertical saw cuts and to reduce the risk of periprosthetic fractures.