Naranje Sameer, Lendway Lisa, Mehle Susan, Gioe Terence J
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2015 Jan;473(1):64-9. doi: 10.1007/s11999-014-3628-4.
Prolonged operative time may increase the risk of infection after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Both surgeon-related and patient-related factors can contribute to increased operative times.
QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: The purpose of this study was to determine (1) whether increased operative time is an independent risk factor for revision resulting from infection after TKA; (2) whether increasing body mass index (BMI) increased operative time; and (3) whether increasing experience substantially decreased operative time.
We retrospectively evaluated primary TKAs from our joint registry between March 2000 and August 2012. Cox proportional hazard models were used to assess the relationship between operative time and revision resulting from infection after accounting for age, sex, BMI, and Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality comorbidity score. Of 9973 instances of primary TKA, 73 underwent revision surgery for infection (0.73%).
After accounting for the confounders of age and sex, operative time was not found to have a significant effect; a 15-minute increase in operative time increased the hazard of revision resulting from infection by only 15.6% (p=0.053; 95% confidence interval, 0.0%-34.0%). In addition, a five-unit increase in BMI was found to increase mean operative time by 1.9 minutes, on average, regardless of sex (p<0.0001). Operative time decreases with increasing experience but appears to plateau at approximately 300 surgeries.
Operative time is only one of many factors that may increase infection risk and may be influenced by numerous confounders. Increasing BMI increased operative time but the effect was modest. The effect of increasing experience on operative duration of this common procedure was surprisingly limited among our surgeons.
Level III, therapeutic study. See Guidelines for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.
全膝关节置换术(TKA)后手术时间延长可能会增加感染风险。与外科医生相关和与患者相关的因素都可能导致手术时间延长。
问题/目的:本研究的目的是确定:(1)手术时间延长是否是TKA后因感染而翻修的独立危险因素;(2)体重指数(BMI)增加是否会延长手术时间;(3)经验增加是否会显著缩短手术时间。
我们回顾性评估了2000年3月至2012年8月期间我们关节登记处的初次TKA病例。在考虑年龄、性别、BMI和医疗保健研究与质量局合并症评分后,使用Cox比例风险模型评估手术时间与因感染而翻修之间的关系。在9973例初次TKA病例中,73例因感染接受了翻修手术(0.73%)。
在考虑年龄和性别的混杂因素后,未发现手术时间有显著影响;手术时间增加15分钟,因感染而翻修的风险仅增加15.6%(p=0.053;95%置信区间,0.0%-34.0%)。此外,发现BMI每增加五个单位,平均手术时间平均增加1.9分钟,与性别无关(p<0.0001)。手术时间随着经验的增加而减少,但在大约300例手术后似乎趋于平稳。
手术时间只是可能增加感染风险的众多因素之一,并且可能受到许多混杂因素的影响。BMI增加会延长手术时间,但影响不大。在我们的外科医生中,经验增加对这种常见手术的手术持续时间的影响出人意料地有限。
III级,治疗性研究。有关证据水平的完整描述,请参阅作者指南。