Porto Joshua R, Lavu Monish S, Hecht Christian J, Guyler Maura R, Acuña Alexander J, Kamath Atul F
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, OH, 44195, USA.
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, 60612, USA.
J Orthop. 2024 Sep 10;60:1-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jor.2024.09.012. eCollection 2025 Feb.
With the advent of outpatient total joint arthroplasty (TJA), the days of routinely drawing postoperative labs (complete blood counts [CBCs] and metabolic panels [CMPs/BMPs]) to monitor for complications are behind us. However, there does exist a subset of at-risk patients that may benefit from diligent postoperative monitoring, though the circumstances under which labs should be ordered remains unclear and subject to surgeon discretion. A systematic review of the literature was therefore conducted to evaluate the utility of postoperative laboratory testing, approaches to targeted patient selection and associated cost-savings.
The PubMed, MEDLINE, EBSCOhost, and Google Scholar electronic databases were searched on August 17, 2023, to identify all studies published since January 1, 2000, that evaluated the role of postoperative lab testing in TJA. (PROSPERO study protocol registration: CRD42023437334). Articles were included if a full-text English manuscript was available and the study assessed the utility of routine postoperative labs in TJA. 19 studies were included comprising 34,166 procedures. The mean Methodological index for Nonrandomized Studies score was 18.2 ± 1.5.
Abnormal postoperative lab results were common and infrequently required clinical intervention. Among several identified risk factors for patients that may benefit from postoperative laboratory monitoring, preoperative lab values proved excellent discriminators of transfusion requirement and metabolite-associated intervention. Selective testing demonstrated the ability to generate substantial cost-savings.
Routine postoperative laboratory testing offers little clinical utility and produces unnecessary expenditures. Preoperative lab values offer the greatest predictive utility for postoperative transfusion requirement and metabolite-associated clinical intervention, with a preoperative hemoglobin threshold of 111.5 g/L offering an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.93 for predicting postoperative transfusion. Further investigations are needed for metabolic panel predictive models and should incorporate preoperative lab values. The refinement of such models can enable targeted patient selection to avoid unnecessary labs and generate substantial cost savings without compromising patient safety.
随着门诊全关节置换术(TJA)的出现,术后常规进行实验室检查(全血细胞计数[CBC]和代谢指标[CMP/BMP])以监测并发症的时代已经过去。然而,确实存在一部分高危患者,他们可能从术后的密切监测中受益,尽管何时应进行实验室检查仍不明确,具体由外科医生自行决定。因此,我们进行了一项系统的文献综述,以评估术后实验室检查的效用、针对性患者选择的方法以及相关的成本节约情况。
于2023年8月17日检索了PubMed、MEDLINE、EBSCOhost和谷歌学术电子数据库,以识别自2000年1月1日以来发表的所有评估术后实验室检查在TJA中作用的研究。(PROSPERO研究方案注册号:CRD42023437334)。如果有英文全文手稿且该研究评估了TJA中常规术后实验室检查的效用,则纳入该文章。共纳入19项研究,涉及34166例手术。非随机研究的平均方法学指数评分为18.2±1.5。
术后实验室检查结果异常很常见,但很少需要临床干预。在确定的可能从术后实验室监测中受益的患者的几个风险因素中,术前实验室值被证明是输血需求和代谢物相关干预的优秀判别指标。选择性检查显示出能够节省大量成本。
术后常规实验室检查临床效用不大,还会产生不必要的费用。术前实验室值对术后输血需求和代谢物相关临床干预具有最大的预测效用,术前血红蛋白阈值为111.5 g/L时,预测术后输血的曲线下面积(AUC)为0.93。代谢指标预测模型还需要进一步研究,且应纳入术前实验室值。完善此类模型可以实现针对性的患者选择,避免不必要的实验室检查,在不影响患者安全的情况下节省大量成本。