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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 70 - 70
1 Jan 2018
Chiaramonti A Orland K Barfield W Drew J Wennberg J Pellegrini V
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Total joint arthroplasty (TJA) is a high value elective orthopaedic procedure, the indications for which may vary among surgeons as well as patients. The utilization of other discretionary procedures is known to be influenced by the availability of qualified surgeons. We investigated the existence of a correlation between geographic variation in TJA utilization and the regional density of arthroplasty surgeons.

The number of Medicare-funded total hip (THA) and total knee (TKA) arthroplasties performed in predetermined geographic referral regions were obtained from the Dartmouth Atlas for 2012. The number of surgeons specializing in total joint arthroplasty in each respective region was derived from the AAHKS membership list. Linear regression was used to assess the relationship between number of arthroplasties performed per 1000 Medicare beneficiaries and the number of AAHKS-members per 100,000 beneficiaries in each Hospital Referral Region (HRR).

For THA in aggregate, a positive correlation was found between number of THA performed per 1,000 beneficiaries and increasing TJA surgeon density. Positive correlations were also noted when HRRs were stratified by size from 50,000 to 250,000 beneficiaries. The number of THA performed per 1,000 beneficiaries in regions with AAHKS members was greater than in regions without (4.03 vs 3.29; p=0.008). In contrast, there was no correlation between the rate of TKA utilization and HRR surgeon density, and no consistent relationship between TKA rate and HRRs stratified by size. Likewise, there was no difference in the rate of TKA between HRRs with and without AAHKS members (8.48 vs 8.84; p=0.18).

The frequency of THA positively correlates with AAHKS surgeon density in all but the largest HRRs and was greater in regions with AAHKS members than in those without. Such relationships were not apparent for TKA utilization. These data may have important implications for more cost-effective utilization of THA.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 139 - 139
1 Jul 2014
Ayers D Snyder B Porter A Walcott M Aubin M Drew J Greene M Bragdon C
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Summary Statement

In young, active patients cementless THR demonstrates excellent prosthetic stability by RSA and outstanding clinical outcomes at 5 years using a tapered titanium femoral stem, crosslinked polyethylene liners and either titanium or tantalum shells.

Introduction

Early femoral implant stability is essential to long-term success in total hip replacement. Radiostereometric analysis (RSA) provides precise measurements of micromotion of the stem relative to the femur that are otherwise not detectable by routine radiographs. This study characterised micromotion of a tapered, cementless femoral stem and tantalum porous-coated vs. titanium acetabular shells in combination with highly cross-linked UHMWPE or conventional polyethylene liners using radiostereometric analysis (RSA) for 5 years following THR.