Musculoskeletal Research Unit, Learning and Research Building, Southmead Hospital, University of Bristol Medical School, Bristol, UK.
Mid Cheshire Hospitals Foundation Trust, Leighton Hospital, Crewe, UK.
Bone Joint J. 2024 Aug 1;106-B(8):834-841. doi: 10.1302/0301-620X.106B8.BJJ-2024-0036.R1.
The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted the provision of arthroplasty services in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. This study aimed to quantify the backlog, analyze national trends, and predict time to recovery.
We performed an analysis of the mandatory prospective national registry of all independent and publicly funded hip, knee, shoulder, elbow, and ankle replacements in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland between January 2019 and December 2022 inclusive, totalling 729,642 operations. The deficit was calculated per year compared to a continuation of 2019 volume. Total deficit of cases between 2020 to 2022 was expressed as a percentage of 2019 volume. Sub-analyses were performed based on procedure type, country, and unit sector.
Between January 2020 and December 2022, there was a deficit of 158,994 joint replacements. This is equivalent to over two-thirds of a year of normal expected operating activity (71.6%). There were 104,724 (-47.1%) fewer performed in 2020, 41,928 (-18.9%) fewer performed in 2021, and 12,342 (-5.6%) fewer performed in 2022, respectively, than in 2019. Independent-sector procedures increased to make it the predominant arthroplasty provider (53% in 2022). NHS activity was 73.2% of 2019 levels, while independent activity increased to 126.8%. Wales (-136.3%) and Northern Ireland (-121.3%) recorded deficits of more than a year's worth of procedures, substantially more than England (-66.7%). It would take until 2031 to eliminate this deficit with an immediate expansion of capacity over 2019 levels by 10%.
The arthroplasty deficit following the COVID-19 pandemic is now equivalent to over two-thirds of a year of normal operating activity, and continues to increase. Patients awaiting different types of arthroplasty, in each country, have been affected disproportionately. A rapid and significant expansion in services is required to address the deficit, and will still take many years to rectify.
COVID-19 大流行扰乱了英格兰、威尔士和北爱尔兰的关节置换服务提供。本研究旨在量化积压量,分析全国趋势,并预测恢复时间。
我们对 2019 年 1 月至 2022 年 12 月期间英格兰、威尔士和北爱尔兰所有独立和公共资助的髋、膝、肩、肘和踝关节置换术的强制性前瞻性全国注册中心进行了分析,总计 729642 例手术。每年与 2019 年的手术量相比,计算出缺陷。2020 年至 2022 年期间的总病例缺陷以 2019 年手术量的百分比表示。根据手术类型、国家和单位部门进行了亚分析。
2020 年 1 月至 2022 年 12 月,关节置换术的缺陷为 158994 例。这相当于超过三分之二的正常预期手术活动(71.6%)。2020 年减少了 104724 例(-47.1%),2021 年减少了 41928 例(-18.9%),2022 年减少了 12342 例(-5.6%)。独立部门的手术量增加,使其成为主要的关节置换提供者(2022 年占 53%)。NHS 的活动量为 2019 年水平的 73.2%,而独立活动量增加到 126.8%。威尔士(-136.3%)和北爱尔兰(-121.3%)记录的缺陷超过了一年的手术量,明显高于英格兰(-66.7%)。如果立即将容量扩大到 2019 年水平的 10%,则需要到 2031 年才能消除这一缺陷。
COVID-19 大流行后的关节置换术缺陷现在相当于超过三分之二的正常手术活动量,且仍在不断增加。每个国家的不同类型关节置换术的患者都受到了不成比例的影响。需要快速、显著地扩大服务范围来解决这一缺陷,这仍需要多年时间才能得到纠正。