Aggarwal Vikram A, Sambandam Senthil N, Wukich Dane K
University of Texas Southwestern, Dallas, TX, USA.
University of Texas Southwestern, Staff Orthopedic Surgeon, Dallas VAMC, Dallas, TX, USA.
J Clin Orthop Trauma. 2022 Aug 20;33:101987. doi: 10.1016/j.jcot.2022.101987. eCollection 2022 Oct.
Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA) is a common orthopaedic surgery to treat advanced knee arthritis. Post-operative complications can be affected by obesity, defined as a body mass index of 30 kg/m or higher. We examine the rates of specific complications, revision rates, and costs of care following TKA and compare them between multifactor matched obese and non-obese patients. We hypothesize these outcomes will be worse in obese patients than in non-obese patients.
This retrospective study of the PearlDiver database queries for patients who underwent TKA under Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) and International Statistical Classification of Diseases (ICD-9) codes between January 2011 and January 2020. Patients were matched based on age, gender, and comorbidity indices, and various complications, revision rates, and costs were compared between the matched obese and non-obese patient groups.
Obesity was associated with higher rates of surgical complications, such as wound complications, surgical site infections, need for revision, and higher total cost of care one year after TKA, and medical complications such as, acute kidney injury, deep vein thrombosis, urinary tract infection, and narcotics use, but significantly lower rates of anemia, arrhythmia, cardiac arrest, pneumonia, and transfusion. Obese patients also experienced significantly lower drug costs of care.
Outcomes were not definitively worse in obese patients when compared to matched non-obese patients. Nevertheless, understanding the complications that can arise following TKA will assist in educating patients about potential risks from surgery and guide surgeons in caring for their patients as obesity is predicted to continue increasing in prevalence. As such, future studies should examine underlying mechanisms that cause these complications to develop potential therapies.
全膝关节置换术(TKA)是治疗晚期膝关节炎的常见骨科手术。术后并发症可能受肥胖影响,肥胖定义为体重指数30kg/m或更高。我们研究了TKA术后特定并发症的发生率、翻修率和护理成本,并在多因素匹配的肥胖和非肥胖患者之间进行比较。我们假设肥胖患者的这些结果会比非肥胖患者更差。
这项对PearlDiver数据库的回顾性研究,查询了2011年1月至2020年1月期间根据现行程序术语(CPT)和国际疾病分类(ICD-9)编码接受TKA的患者。根据年龄、性别和合并症指数对患者进行匹配,并比较匹配的肥胖和非肥胖患者组之间的各种并发症、翻修率和成本。
肥胖与较高的手术并发症发生率相关,如伤口并发症、手术部位感染、翻修需求以及TKA术后一年较高的总护理成本,还与急性肾损伤、深静脉血栓形成、尿路感染和使用麻醉药品等医疗并发症相关,但贫血、心律失常、心脏骤停、肺炎和输血的发生率显著较低。肥胖患者的药物护理成本也显著较低。
与匹配的非肥胖患者相比,肥胖患者的结果并非绝对更差。然而,了解TKA术后可能出现的并发症将有助于对患者进行手术潜在风险的教育,并指导外科医生护理患者,因为预计肥胖患病率将持续上升。因此,未来的研究应检查导致这些并发症的潜在机制,以开发潜在的治疗方法。