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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 101-B, Issue SUPP_5 | Pages 98 - 98
1 Apr 2019
Brooks P Brigati D Khlopas A Greenwald AS Mont M
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Introduction. Hip resurfacing arthroplasty (HRA) is an alternative to traditional total hip arthroplasty (THA) in young active patients. While comparative implant survival rates are well documented, there is a paucity of studies reporting the patient mortality rates associated with these procedures. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the mortality rates in patients age 55 years and younger who underwent HRA versus THA and to assess whether the type of operation was independently associated with mortality. Patients and Methods. The database of a single high-volume surgeon was reviewed for all consecutive patients age 55 years and younger who underwent hip arthroplasty between 2002 and 2010. HRA became available in the United States in 2006. This yielded 504 patients who had undergone HRA from 2006 to 2010 and 124 patients who had undergone a THA. Patient characteristics were collected from the electronic medical record including age, gender, body mass index, Charleston comorbidity index, smoking status, and primary diagnosis. Mortality was determined through a combination of electronic chart reviews, patient phone calls, and online obituary searches. Univariate analysis was performed to identify a survival difference between the two cohorts. Multivariable Cox-Regression analyses were used to determine whether the type of operation was independently associated with mortality. Results. The mean follow up for consecutive patients was 7 years (up to 11 years) in the HRA group and 8 years (up to 16 years) in the THA group. A total of 467 HRA patients (92%) and 105 THA patients (85%) were followed for a minimum of 5-years. 92% of the THA procedures were performed prior to the availability of HRA. There were 8 mortalities (1.6%) in the HRA cohort and 11 (8.9%) in the THA cohort, a statistically significant difference (p<0.001) on univariate analysis. Low mortality rates produced underpowered multivariate models. Conclusion. We have demonstrated that patients under age 55 who undergo HRA have a significantly lower mortality rate than those undergoing THA at mid-term follow-up. This is consistent with previously published large database studies. Such studies typically analyze large heterogeneous populations of patients and surgeons. Our study uniquely examined only patients age 55 or younger from a single high-volume surgeon, and we primarily reviewed THA performed prior to the availability of HRA as a surgical option. Thus, surgeon selection bias was largely eliminated. To our knowledge, this is the first single surgeon study comparing HRA and THA in terms of mortality


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_6 | Pages 70 - 70
1 Mar 2017
Veltre D Yi P Sing D Smith E Li X
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Introduction. Knee arthroplasty is one of the most common inpatient surgeries procedures performed every year however complications do occur. Prior studies have examined the impact of insurance status on complications after TJA in small or focused cohorts. The purpose of our study was to utilize a large all-payer inpatient healthcare database to evaluate the effect of patient insurance status on complications following knee arthroplasty. Methods. Data was obtained from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample between 2004 and 2011. Analysis included patients undergoing knee arthroplasty procedures determined by ICD-9 procedure codes. Patient demographics and comorbidities were analyzed and stratified by insurance type. The primary outcome was medical complications, surgical complications and mortality during the same hospitalization. A secondary analysis was performed using a matched cohort comparing patients with Medicare vs private insurance using the coarsened exact matching algorithm. Pearson's chi-squared test and multivariate regression were performed. Results. Overall, 1,352,505 (57.8% Medicare, 35.6% private insurance, 2.6% Medicaid or uninsured, 3.3% Other) patients fulfilled criteria for inclusion into the study. Most were primary total knee arthroplasties (96.1%) with 3.9% revision knee arthroplasties. Multivariate regression analysis showed that patients with private insurance had fewer complications (OR 0.82, p=<0.001) compared to Medicare patients. Similar trends were found for surgical complications and mortality. Patients with Medicare or no insurance had more surgical complications but equivalent rates of medical complications and mortality. The matched cohort showed Medicare and private insurance patients had overall low mortality rates and complication. The most common complication was postoperative anemia, occurring in 16.2% of Medicare patients and 15.3% of patients with private insurance (RR=1.06, p<0.001). Mortality (RR 1.34), wound dehiscence (RR 1.32), CNS, GI complications, although rare, were all statistically more common in Medicare patients (p<0.05) while cardiac complications (RR 0.93, p=0.003) was more common in patients with private insurance. Discussion and Conclusion. This data reveals that patients with Medicare insurance have higher risk of medical complications, surgical complications and mortality following knee arthroplasty. Using a matched cohort to directly compare Medicare and private insurance patients, the risk of postoperative complications were low overall (with the exception of postoperative anemia), but in general were more common in Medicare patients