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Is aspirin the best way to prevent blood clots after THA/TKA?
CHICAGO – Patients discharged to facilities rather than to home after total hip arthroplasty (THA) or total knee arthroplasty (TKA) may need more potent chemoprophylaxis than aspirin to prevent blood clots, new data suggest.
Researchers led by Stefano Muscatelli, MD, an orthopedist at Michigan Medicine, Ann Arbor, first aimed to determine whether there was an increase in risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) in patients who were discharged to facilities such as a skilled nursing facility or inpatient rehabilitation facility, compared with those discharged to home after THA or TKA.
The second aim was to determine whether VTE risk differed between home- and non–home-discharge patients when stratified by the chemoprophylaxis prescribed to prevent VTE.
Findings were presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons by coauthor Michael McHugh, MD, also an orthopedist at Michigan Medicine in Ann Arbor.
The agents were categorized in three groups: aspirin only; more aggressive anticoagulants, including warfarin, factor Xa inhibitor, direct thrombin inhibitor, low-molecular-weight heparin, pentasaccharide, or antiplatelet agents, with or without concurrent aspirin; and other regimens.
The researchers found that rates of VTE were higher among patients discharged to facilities.
Of 6,411 patients included in the study, the overall rate of VTE was 1.05%. Among home-discharge patients (n = 5445), rates of VTE were significantly lower than among patients discharged to facilities (n = 966) (0.83% vs. 2.26%; P < .001).
However, the researchers found there was no difference in VTE rates between non-home and home discharge in patients who received more aggressive chemoprophylaxis.
Among discharged patients who received only aspirin, rates of VTE among those discharged to home were significantly lower compared to those discharged to facilities (0.76% vs. 3.83%; P < .001).
“Smoking, BMI [body mass index], procedure type, and preoperative anticoagulation were not associated with the outcome of VTE,” Dr. McHugh said.
“Although we found VTE to continue to be an uncommon complication, non-home discharge is independently associated with higher rates of VTE. Patients should be encouraged to discharge home, but those discharged to non-home facilities after total joint arthroplasty should be considered for more potent chemoprophylaxis than aspirin,” he concluded.
Stuart J. Fischer, MD, with Summit (N.J.) Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, who was not part of the study, told this news organization that he found the results inconclusive.
He said there is the potential for confounding because “the people who are sent to a facility after total hip or total knee are inherently less mobile and less able to take care of themselves, so they are at a higher risk for VTE. They are going to be more static.”
Dr. Fischer noted that over the past few years, there has been a movement away from anticoagulation with more aggressive agents toward aspirin, for several reasons. Providers don’t have to monitor aspirin use and can instruct patients to take it once or twice a day. Initial data seem to show that it protects well against VTE.
“The question is, in certain population of patients, is it enough? And that’s where the data are unclear,” Dr. Fischer said.
“It’s certainly a useful study, and we need to find out which methods of anticoagulation are most effective in each setting,” he said.
Limitations include that it was a retrospective review and that adverse events from more aggressive chemoprophylaxis agents were not assessed. Prophylactic regimens were chosen at the discretion of the treating surgeon.
The researchers excluded bilateral cases, conversion arthroplasty, hip hemiarthroplasty, unicompartmental knee arthroplasty, and deaths.
Dr. Muscatelli and Dr. McHugh reported no relevant financial relationships. A coauthor reported being a paid consultant for DePuy and Zimmer. Dr. Fischer reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
CHICAGO – Patients discharged to facilities rather than to home after total hip arthroplasty (THA) or total knee arthroplasty (TKA) may need more potent chemoprophylaxis than aspirin to prevent blood clots, new data suggest.
Researchers led by Stefano Muscatelli, MD, an orthopedist at Michigan Medicine, Ann Arbor, first aimed to determine whether there was an increase in risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) in patients who were discharged to facilities such as a skilled nursing facility or inpatient rehabilitation facility, compared with those discharged to home after THA or TKA.
The second aim was to determine whether VTE risk differed between home- and non–home-discharge patients when stratified by the chemoprophylaxis prescribed to prevent VTE.
Findings were presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons by coauthor Michael McHugh, MD, also an orthopedist at Michigan Medicine in Ann Arbor.
The agents were categorized in three groups: aspirin only; more aggressive anticoagulants, including warfarin, factor Xa inhibitor, direct thrombin inhibitor, low-molecular-weight heparin, pentasaccharide, or antiplatelet agents, with or without concurrent aspirin; and other regimens.
The researchers found that rates of VTE were higher among patients discharged to facilities.
Of 6,411 patients included in the study, the overall rate of VTE was 1.05%. Among home-discharge patients (n = 5445), rates of VTE were significantly lower than among patients discharged to facilities (n = 966) (0.83% vs. 2.26%; P < .001).
However, the researchers found there was no difference in VTE rates between non-home and home discharge in patients who received more aggressive chemoprophylaxis.
Among discharged patients who received only aspirin, rates of VTE among those discharged to home were significantly lower compared to those discharged to facilities (0.76% vs. 3.83%; P < .001).
“Smoking, BMI [body mass index], procedure type, and preoperative anticoagulation were not associated with the outcome of VTE,” Dr. McHugh said.
“Although we found VTE to continue to be an uncommon complication, non-home discharge is independently associated with higher rates of VTE. Patients should be encouraged to discharge home, but those discharged to non-home facilities after total joint arthroplasty should be considered for more potent chemoprophylaxis than aspirin,” he concluded.
Stuart J. Fischer, MD, with Summit (N.J.) Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, who was not part of the study, told this news organization that he found the results inconclusive.
He said there is the potential for confounding because “the people who are sent to a facility after total hip or total knee are inherently less mobile and less able to take care of themselves, so they are at a higher risk for VTE. They are going to be more static.”
Dr. Fischer noted that over the past few years, there has been a movement away from anticoagulation with more aggressive agents toward aspirin, for several reasons. Providers don’t have to monitor aspirin use and can instruct patients to take it once or twice a day. Initial data seem to show that it protects well against VTE.
“The question is, in certain population of patients, is it enough? And that’s where the data are unclear,” Dr. Fischer said.
“It’s certainly a useful study, and we need to find out which methods of anticoagulation are most effective in each setting,” he said.
Limitations include that it was a retrospective review and that adverse events from more aggressive chemoprophylaxis agents were not assessed. Prophylactic regimens were chosen at the discretion of the treating surgeon.
The researchers excluded bilateral cases, conversion arthroplasty, hip hemiarthroplasty, unicompartmental knee arthroplasty, and deaths.
Dr. Muscatelli and Dr. McHugh reported no relevant financial relationships. A coauthor reported being a paid consultant for DePuy and Zimmer. Dr. Fischer reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
CHICAGO – Patients discharged to facilities rather than to home after total hip arthroplasty (THA) or total knee arthroplasty (TKA) may need more potent chemoprophylaxis than aspirin to prevent blood clots, new data suggest.
Researchers led by Stefano Muscatelli, MD, an orthopedist at Michigan Medicine, Ann Arbor, first aimed to determine whether there was an increase in risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) in patients who were discharged to facilities such as a skilled nursing facility or inpatient rehabilitation facility, compared with those discharged to home after THA or TKA.
The second aim was to determine whether VTE risk differed between home- and non–home-discharge patients when stratified by the chemoprophylaxis prescribed to prevent VTE.
Findings were presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons by coauthor Michael McHugh, MD, also an orthopedist at Michigan Medicine in Ann Arbor.
The agents were categorized in three groups: aspirin only; more aggressive anticoagulants, including warfarin, factor Xa inhibitor, direct thrombin inhibitor, low-molecular-weight heparin, pentasaccharide, or antiplatelet agents, with or without concurrent aspirin; and other regimens.
The researchers found that rates of VTE were higher among patients discharged to facilities.
Of 6,411 patients included in the study, the overall rate of VTE was 1.05%. Among home-discharge patients (n = 5445), rates of VTE were significantly lower than among patients discharged to facilities (n = 966) (0.83% vs. 2.26%; P < .001).
However, the researchers found there was no difference in VTE rates between non-home and home discharge in patients who received more aggressive chemoprophylaxis.
Among discharged patients who received only aspirin, rates of VTE among those discharged to home were significantly lower compared to those discharged to facilities (0.76% vs. 3.83%; P < .001).
“Smoking, BMI [body mass index], procedure type, and preoperative anticoagulation were not associated with the outcome of VTE,” Dr. McHugh said.
“Although we found VTE to continue to be an uncommon complication, non-home discharge is independently associated with higher rates of VTE. Patients should be encouraged to discharge home, but those discharged to non-home facilities after total joint arthroplasty should be considered for more potent chemoprophylaxis than aspirin,” he concluded.
Stuart J. Fischer, MD, with Summit (N.J.) Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, who was not part of the study, told this news organization that he found the results inconclusive.
He said there is the potential for confounding because “the people who are sent to a facility after total hip or total knee are inherently less mobile and less able to take care of themselves, so they are at a higher risk for VTE. They are going to be more static.”
Dr. Fischer noted that over the past few years, there has been a movement away from anticoagulation with more aggressive agents toward aspirin, for several reasons. Providers don’t have to monitor aspirin use and can instruct patients to take it once or twice a day. Initial data seem to show that it protects well against VTE.
“The question is, in certain population of patients, is it enough? And that’s where the data are unclear,” Dr. Fischer said.
“It’s certainly a useful study, and we need to find out which methods of anticoagulation are most effective in each setting,” he said.
Limitations include that it was a retrospective review and that adverse events from more aggressive chemoprophylaxis agents were not assessed. Prophylactic regimens were chosen at the discretion of the treating surgeon.
The researchers excluded bilateral cases, conversion arthroplasty, hip hemiarthroplasty, unicompartmental knee arthroplasty, and deaths.
Dr. Muscatelli and Dr. McHugh reported no relevant financial relationships. A coauthor reported being a paid consultant for DePuy and Zimmer. Dr. Fischer reported no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
AT AAOS 2022
Virtual and in-person pediatric visits get similar family ratings
CHICAGO – Satisfaction ratings for virtual outpatient visits for pediatric orthopedic patients were similar to those for in-person office visits across most categories in an analysis of postencounter surveys completed by patients at the Cleveland Clinic.
Satisfaction ratings for both virtual and office visits were consistently higher than 85% across all measured parameters, according to the data presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.
Ahmed Emara, MD, a clinical research fellow in adult joint reconstruction at the Cleveland Clinic, led the study, which included data from all patients or guardians at the clinic who experienced such visits from March 2020 to March 2021.
A total of 1,686 responses were received, of which 226 (13.4%) involved virtual visits and 1,460 (86.6%) involved in-office visits. The primary endpoint was a patient-reported satisfaction score of good or excellent.
Analysis included ratings for access, care provider, telemedicine technology, and overall assessment/perception of satisfaction.
Target areas for improvement
In some areas, the virtual visits were less satisfactory than the in-office visits.
Patients had lower odds of reporting good/excellent satisfaction regarding their ability to schedule at a particularly convenient time (odds ratio, 0.1; 95% confidence interval, 0.08-0.18; P < .001). The study authors said scheduling more virtual time slots may help increase satisfaction in that area.
Satisfaction was also lower than with in-office visits with respect to providers’ explanations of patients’ conditions (OR, 0.4; 95% CI, 0.17-0.91; P = .03). Providers may need to find ways to better provide educational material in addition to the virtual consultation, the authors wrote.
No significant differences in categories of satisfaction
The researchers accounted for age, sex, traumatic etiology, and anatomic location of the complaint in multivariate regression analysis and found no significant differences between the two types of visits in the odds of getting a good/excellent rating for the following areas: patient inclusion in treatment decision (P = .562), discussion of proposed treatment (P = .222), concern by the provider (P = .189), degree of care for the patient as a person (P = .208), adequacy of teamwork in care provision (P = .053), likelihood of recommending the practice to others (P = .108), ease of receiving care at a particular practice (P = .109), ease of contacting the clinic (P = .177), and likelihood of recommending a particular provider (P = .218).
Anna Dimitriovna Vergun, MD, a pediatric orthopedist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, who was not involved in the study, said in an interview she had been conducting virtual visits even before the pandemic, when she worked for several years at a Shriner’s children’s hospital in Los Angeles, before coming to UNC. The virtual visits were necessary because the hospital offered charity care and covered an area that included several states.
She said that during the height of the pandemic, 80% of her visits at UNC were virtual; it is down to about 5% now.
Some consultations don’t need physical visits at all, Dr. Vergun noted. For example, UNC is starting a clinic for prenatal counseling in cases in which ultrasound detects a limb deformity. Without a virtual option, she said, pregnant mothers in all parts of the state may have to drive long distances when no physical exam is necessary.
And sometimes, a visit simply involves checking in with families to see whether pain is being controlled, which is done well virtually.
“Those are particularly useful for telemedicine,” Dr. Vergun said. “There’s a lot of space for this to be useful. You sometimes don’t realize it until you start doing it and getting feedback from the families that they like it.”
Other exams may be better suited to office visits, she said. These include spine and hip exams and exams in which providers need to check reflexes.
She said she sees many cases of club feet, for which an in-person exam is needed to determine flexibility.
Expert says virtual misses nuances
Ryan Fitzgerald, MD, an orthopedic expert with Children’s Orthopaedic and Scoliosis Surgery Associates in St. Petersburg, Fla., who also was not involved in the study, said in an interview he doesn’t offer the virtual option now because he thinks those visits usually miss too much.
COSSA is a private practice that provides orthopedic services for Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital.
“I think physicians’ perspective versus the families’ perspective may be quite a bit different,” he said.
While families like the convenience, “a lot of what we do is watching the patient walk, looking at their hip range of motion, and virtually, that’s a really difficult thing to do,” he said.
You can instruct a family on how to turn a camera on the patient, but “it doesn’t always translate,” he said.
He said virtual visits also highlight disparities in access, because many families don’t own the hardware needed for such visits, and internet connections can be spotty or images pixelated.
Dr. Fitzgerald said virtual visits were helpful during the pandemic and would be beneficial for yearly checkups “if you know [the patient] well and it’s a fairly run-of-the-mill thing.”
However, he said, “everything we do is about human interaction, and I think that’s a downfall of the virtual platform right now. While it is helpful in situations like COVID and where it is a very basic follow-up, it still has a ways to go.”
Dr. Fitzgerald is a consultant for OrthoPediatrics, Medtronic, and Depuy Synthes. Dr. Vergun disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
CHICAGO – Satisfaction ratings for virtual outpatient visits for pediatric orthopedic patients were similar to those for in-person office visits across most categories in an analysis of postencounter surveys completed by patients at the Cleveland Clinic.
Satisfaction ratings for both virtual and office visits were consistently higher than 85% across all measured parameters, according to the data presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.
Ahmed Emara, MD, a clinical research fellow in adult joint reconstruction at the Cleveland Clinic, led the study, which included data from all patients or guardians at the clinic who experienced such visits from March 2020 to March 2021.
A total of 1,686 responses were received, of which 226 (13.4%) involved virtual visits and 1,460 (86.6%) involved in-office visits. The primary endpoint was a patient-reported satisfaction score of good or excellent.
Analysis included ratings for access, care provider, telemedicine technology, and overall assessment/perception of satisfaction.
Target areas for improvement
In some areas, the virtual visits were less satisfactory than the in-office visits.
Patients had lower odds of reporting good/excellent satisfaction regarding their ability to schedule at a particularly convenient time (odds ratio, 0.1; 95% confidence interval, 0.08-0.18; P < .001). The study authors said scheduling more virtual time slots may help increase satisfaction in that area.
Satisfaction was also lower than with in-office visits with respect to providers’ explanations of patients’ conditions (OR, 0.4; 95% CI, 0.17-0.91; P = .03). Providers may need to find ways to better provide educational material in addition to the virtual consultation, the authors wrote.
No significant differences in categories of satisfaction
The researchers accounted for age, sex, traumatic etiology, and anatomic location of the complaint in multivariate regression analysis and found no significant differences between the two types of visits in the odds of getting a good/excellent rating for the following areas: patient inclusion in treatment decision (P = .562), discussion of proposed treatment (P = .222), concern by the provider (P = .189), degree of care for the patient as a person (P = .208), adequacy of teamwork in care provision (P = .053), likelihood of recommending the practice to others (P = .108), ease of receiving care at a particular practice (P = .109), ease of contacting the clinic (P = .177), and likelihood of recommending a particular provider (P = .218).
Anna Dimitriovna Vergun, MD, a pediatric orthopedist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, who was not involved in the study, said in an interview she had been conducting virtual visits even before the pandemic, when she worked for several years at a Shriner’s children’s hospital in Los Angeles, before coming to UNC. The virtual visits were necessary because the hospital offered charity care and covered an area that included several states.
She said that during the height of the pandemic, 80% of her visits at UNC were virtual; it is down to about 5% now.
Some consultations don’t need physical visits at all, Dr. Vergun noted. For example, UNC is starting a clinic for prenatal counseling in cases in which ultrasound detects a limb deformity. Without a virtual option, she said, pregnant mothers in all parts of the state may have to drive long distances when no physical exam is necessary.
And sometimes, a visit simply involves checking in with families to see whether pain is being controlled, which is done well virtually.
“Those are particularly useful for telemedicine,” Dr. Vergun said. “There’s a lot of space for this to be useful. You sometimes don’t realize it until you start doing it and getting feedback from the families that they like it.”
Other exams may be better suited to office visits, she said. These include spine and hip exams and exams in which providers need to check reflexes.
She said she sees many cases of club feet, for which an in-person exam is needed to determine flexibility.
Expert says virtual misses nuances
Ryan Fitzgerald, MD, an orthopedic expert with Children’s Orthopaedic and Scoliosis Surgery Associates in St. Petersburg, Fla., who also was not involved in the study, said in an interview he doesn’t offer the virtual option now because he thinks those visits usually miss too much.
COSSA is a private practice that provides orthopedic services for Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital.
“I think physicians’ perspective versus the families’ perspective may be quite a bit different,” he said.
While families like the convenience, “a lot of what we do is watching the patient walk, looking at their hip range of motion, and virtually, that’s a really difficult thing to do,” he said.
You can instruct a family on how to turn a camera on the patient, but “it doesn’t always translate,” he said.
He said virtual visits also highlight disparities in access, because many families don’t own the hardware needed for such visits, and internet connections can be spotty or images pixelated.
Dr. Fitzgerald said virtual visits were helpful during the pandemic and would be beneficial for yearly checkups “if you know [the patient] well and it’s a fairly run-of-the-mill thing.”
However, he said, “everything we do is about human interaction, and I think that’s a downfall of the virtual platform right now. While it is helpful in situations like COVID and where it is a very basic follow-up, it still has a ways to go.”
Dr. Fitzgerald is a consultant for OrthoPediatrics, Medtronic, and Depuy Synthes. Dr. Vergun disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
CHICAGO – Satisfaction ratings for virtual outpatient visits for pediatric orthopedic patients were similar to those for in-person office visits across most categories in an analysis of postencounter surveys completed by patients at the Cleveland Clinic.
Satisfaction ratings for both virtual and office visits were consistently higher than 85% across all measured parameters, according to the data presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.
Ahmed Emara, MD, a clinical research fellow in adult joint reconstruction at the Cleveland Clinic, led the study, which included data from all patients or guardians at the clinic who experienced such visits from March 2020 to March 2021.
A total of 1,686 responses were received, of which 226 (13.4%) involved virtual visits and 1,460 (86.6%) involved in-office visits. The primary endpoint was a patient-reported satisfaction score of good or excellent.
Analysis included ratings for access, care provider, telemedicine technology, and overall assessment/perception of satisfaction.
Target areas for improvement
In some areas, the virtual visits were less satisfactory than the in-office visits.
Patients had lower odds of reporting good/excellent satisfaction regarding their ability to schedule at a particularly convenient time (odds ratio, 0.1; 95% confidence interval, 0.08-0.18; P < .001). The study authors said scheduling more virtual time slots may help increase satisfaction in that area.
Satisfaction was also lower than with in-office visits with respect to providers’ explanations of patients’ conditions (OR, 0.4; 95% CI, 0.17-0.91; P = .03). Providers may need to find ways to better provide educational material in addition to the virtual consultation, the authors wrote.
No significant differences in categories of satisfaction
The researchers accounted for age, sex, traumatic etiology, and anatomic location of the complaint in multivariate regression analysis and found no significant differences between the two types of visits in the odds of getting a good/excellent rating for the following areas: patient inclusion in treatment decision (P = .562), discussion of proposed treatment (P = .222), concern by the provider (P = .189), degree of care for the patient as a person (P = .208), adequacy of teamwork in care provision (P = .053), likelihood of recommending the practice to others (P = .108), ease of receiving care at a particular practice (P = .109), ease of contacting the clinic (P = .177), and likelihood of recommending a particular provider (P = .218).
Anna Dimitriovna Vergun, MD, a pediatric orthopedist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, who was not involved in the study, said in an interview she had been conducting virtual visits even before the pandemic, when she worked for several years at a Shriner’s children’s hospital in Los Angeles, before coming to UNC. The virtual visits were necessary because the hospital offered charity care and covered an area that included several states.
She said that during the height of the pandemic, 80% of her visits at UNC were virtual; it is down to about 5% now.
Some consultations don’t need physical visits at all, Dr. Vergun noted. For example, UNC is starting a clinic for prenatal counseling in cases in which ultrasound detects a limb deformity. Without a virtual option, she said, pregnant mothers in all parts of the state may have to drive long distances when no physical exam is necessary.
And sometimes, a visit simply involves checking in with families to see whether pain is being controlled, which is done well virtually.
“Those are particularly useful for telemedicine,” Dr. Vergun said. “There’s a lot of space for this to be useful. You sometimes don’t realize it until you start doing it and getting feedback from the families that they like it.”
Other exams may be better suited to office visits, she said. These include spine and hip exams and exams in which providers need to check reflexes.
She said she sees many cases of club feet, for which an in-person exam is needed to determine flexibility.
Expert says virtual misses nuances
Ryan Fitzgerald, MD, an orthopedic expert with Children’s Orthopaedic and Scoliosis Surgery Associates in St. Petersburg, Fla., who also was not involved in the study, said in an interview he doesn’t offer the virtual option now because he thinks those visits usually miss too much.
COSSA is a private practice that provides orthopedic services for Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital.
“I think physicians’ perspective versus the families’ perspective may be quite a bit different,” he said.
While families like the convenience, “a lot of what we do is watching the patient walk, looking at their hip range of motion, and virtually, that’s a really difficult thing to do,” he said.
You can instruct a family on how to turn a camera on the patient, but “it doesn’t always translate,” he said.
He said virtual visits also highlight disparities in access, because many families don’t own the hardware needed for such visits, and internet connections can be spotty or images pixelated.
Dr. Fitzgerald said virtual visits were helpful during the pandemic and would be beneficial for yearly checkups “if you know [the patient] well and it’s a fairly run-of-the-mill thing.”
However, he said, “everything we do is about human interaction, and I think that’s a downfall of the virtual platform right now. While it is helpful in situations like COVID and where it is a very basic follow-up, it still has a ways to go.”
Dr. Fitzgerald is a consultant for OrthoPediatrics, Medtronic, and Depuy Synthes. Dr. Vergun disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
AT AAOS 2022
Medical cannabis may cut opioid use for back pain, OA
CHICAGO – Access to medical cannabis (MC) cut opioid prescriptions for patients with chronic noncancer back pain and patients with osteoarthritis, according to preliminary data presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.
For those with chronic back pain, the average morphine milligram equivalents (MME) per day dropped from 15.1 to 11.0 (n = 186; P < .01). More than one-third of the patients (38.7%) stopped taking morphine after they filled prescriptions for medical cannabis.
Opioid prescriptions were filled 6 months before access to MC and then were compared with 6 months after access to MC.
In analyzing subgroups, the researchers found that patients who started at less than 15 MME/day and more than 15 MME/day showed significant decreases after filling the MC prescription.
Almost half (48.5%) of the patients in the group that started at less than 15 MME daily dropped to 0 MME/day, and 13.5% of patients who were getting more than 15 MME/day stopped using opioids.
Data on filled opioid prescriptions were gathered from a Prescription Drug Monitoring Program (PDMP) system for patients diagnosed with chronic musculoskeletal noncancer back pain who were eligible for MC access between February 2018 and July 2019.
Medical cannabis has shown benefit in treating chronic pain, but evidence has been limited on whether it can reduce opioid use, which can lead to substance abuse, addiction, overdose, and death, the researchers noted.
Researchers found that using MC via multiple routes of administration seemed to be important.
Patients who used only a single administration route showed a statistically insignificant decrease in MME/day from 20.0 to 15.1 (n = 68; P = .054), whereas patients who used two or more routes showed a significant decrease from 13.2 to 9.5 (n = 76; P < .01).
“We have many patients who are benefiting from a single route of delivery for chronic orthopedic pain,” Ari Greis, DO, a physical medicine and rehabilitation specialist in Bryn Mawr, Pa., and a coauthor of the MC studies for both back pain and OA, said in an interview. “However, our data shows a greater reduction in opioid consumption in patients using more than one route of delivery.”
He said delivery modes in the studies included vaporized cannabis oil or flower; sublingual tinctures; capsules or tablets; and topical lotions, creams, and salves.
Dr. Greis is the director of the medical cannabis department at Rothman Orthopaedic Institute in Bryn Mawr, and is a senior fellow in the Institute of Emerging Health Professions and the Lambert Center for the Study of Medicinal Cannabis and Hemp, both in Philadelphia.
Medical cannabis also reduces opioids for OA
The same team of researchers, using the data from the PDMP system, showed that medical cannabis also helped reduce opioid use for osteoarthritis.
For patients using opioids for OA, there was a significant decrease in average MME/day of prescriptions filled by patients following MC access – from 18.2 to 9.8 (n = 40; P < .05). The average drop in MME/day was 46.3%. The percentage of patients who stopped using opioids was 37.5%. Pain score on a 0-10 visual analog scale decreased significantly from 6.6 (n = 36) to 5.0 (n = 26; P < .01) at 3 months and 5.4 (n = 16; P < .05) at 6 months.
Gary Stewart, MD, an orthopedic surgeon in Morrow, Ga., who was not part of the studies, told this news organization that the studies offer good preliminary data to offer help with the opioid issue.
“I sometimes feel that we, as orthopedic surgeons and physicians in general, are working with one hand behind our back. We’re taking something that is a heroin or morphine derivative and giving it to our patients when we know it has a high risk of building tolerance and addiction. But at the same time, we have no alternative,” he said.
He said it’s important to remember the results from the relatively small study are preliminary and observational. People used different forms and amounts of MC and the data show only that prescriptions were filled, but not whether the cannabis was used. Prospective, controlled studies where opioids go head-to-head with MC are needed, he said.
“Still, this can lead us to more studies to give us an option [apart from] an opioid that we know is highly addictive,” he said.
Dr. Stewart is a member of the AAOS Opioid Task Force. Dr. Greis and several coauthors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships, and other coauthors report financial ties to companies unrelated to the research presented.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
CHICAGO – Access to medical cannabis (MC) cut opioid prescriptions for patients with chronic noncancer back pain and patients with osteoarthritis, according to preliminary data presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.
For those with chronic back pain, the average morphine milligram equivalents (MME) per day dropped from 15.1 to 11.0 (n = 186; P < .01). More than one-third of the patients (38.7%) stopped taking morphine after they filled prescriptions for medical cannabis.
Opioid prescriptions were filled 6 months before access to MC and then were compared with 6 months after access to MC.
In analyzing subgroups, the researchers found that patients who started at less than 15 MME/day and more than 15 MME/day showed significant decreases after filling the MC prescription.
Almost half (48.5%) of the patients in the group that started at less than 15 MME daily dropped to 0 MME/day, and 13.5% of patients who were getting more than 15 MME/day stopped using opioids.
Data on filled opioid prescriptions were gathered from a Prescription Drug Monitoring Program (PDMP) system for patients diagnosed with chronic musculoskeletal noncancer back pain who were eligible for MC access between February 2018 and July 2019.
Medical cannabis has shown benefit in treating chronic pain, but evidence has been limited on whether it can reduce opioid use, which can lead to substance abuse, addiction, overdose, and death, the researchers noted.
Researchers found that using MC via multiple routes of administration seemed to be important.
Patients who used only a single administration route showed a statistically insignificant decrease in MME/day from 20.0 to 15.1 (n = 68; P = .054), whereas patients who used two or more routes showed a significant decrease from 13.2 to 9.5 (n = 76; P < .01).
“We have many patients who are benefiting from a single route of delivery for chronic orthopedic pain,” Ari Greis, DO, a physical medicine and rehabilitation specialist in Bryn Mawr, Pa., and a coauthor of the MC studies for both back pain and OA, said in an interview. “However, our data shows a greater reduction in opioid consumption in patients using more than one route of delivery.”
He said delivery modes in the studies included vaporized cannabis oil or flower; sublingual tinctures; capsules or tablets; and topical lotions, creams, and salves.
Dr. Greis is the director of the medical cannabis department at Rothman Orthopaedic Institute in Bryn Mawr, and is a senior fellow in the Institute of Emerging Health Professions and the Lambert Center for the Study of Medicinal Cannabis and Hemp, both in Philadelphia.
Medical cannabis also reduces opioids for OA
The same team of researchers, using the data from the PDMP system, showed that medical cannabis also helped reduce opioid use for osteoarthritis.
For patients using opioids for OA, there was a significant decrease in average MME/day of prescriptions filled by patients following MC access – from 18.2 to 9.8 (n = 40; P < .05). The average drop in MME/day was 46.3%. The percentage of patients who stopped using opioids was 37.5%. Pain score on a 0-10 visual analog scale decreased significantly from 6.6 (n = 36) to 5.0 (n = 26; P < .01) at 3 months and 5.4 (n = 16; P < .05) at 6 months.
Gary Stewart, MD, an orthopedic surgeon in Morrow, Ga., who was not part of the studies, told this news organization that the studies offer good preliminary data to offer help with the opioid issue.
“I sometimes feel that we, as orthopedic surgeons and physicians in general, are working with one hand behind our back. We’re taking something that is a heroin or morphine derivative and giving it to our patients when we know it has a high risk of building tolerance and addiction. But at the same time, we have no alternative,” he said.
He said it’s important to remember the results from the relatively small study are preliminary and observational. People used different forms and amounts of MC and the data show only that prescriptions were filled, but not whether the cannabis was used. Prospective, controlled studies where opioids go head-to-head with MC are needed, he said.
“Still, this can lead us to more studies to give us an option [apart from] an opioid that we know is highly addictive,” he said.
Dr. Stewart is a member of the AAOS Opioid Task Force. Dr. Greis and several coauthors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships, and other coauthors report financial ties to companies unrelated to the research presented.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
CHICAGO – Access to medical cannabis (MC) cut opioid prescriptions for patients with chronic noncancer back pain and patients with osteoarthritis, according to preliminary data presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.
For those with chronic back pain, the average morphine milligram equivalents (MME) per day dropped from 15.1 to 11.0 (n = 186; P < .01). More than one-third of the patients (38.7%) stopped taking morphine after they filled prescriptions for medical cannabis.
Opioid prescriptions were filled 6 months before access to MC and then were compared with 6 months after access to MC.
In analyzing subgroups, the researchers found that patients who started at less than 15 MME/day and more than 15 MME/day showed significant decreases after filling the MC prescription.
Almost half (48.5%) of the patients in the group that started at less than 15 MME daily dropped to 0 MME/day, and 13.5% of patients who were getting more than 15 MME/day stopped using opioids.
Data on filled opioid prescriptions were gathered from a Prescription Drug Monitoring Program (PDMP) system for patients diagnosed with chronic musculoskeletal noncancer back pain who were eligible for MC access between February 2018 and July 2019.
Medical cannabis has shown benefit in treating chronic pain, but evidence has been limited on whether it can reduce opioid use, which can lead to substance abuse, addiction, overdose, and death, the researchers noted.
Researchers found that using MC via multiple routes of administration seemed to be important.
Patients who used only a single administration route showed a statistically insignificant decrease in MME/day from 20.0 to 15.1 (n = 68; P = .054), whereas patients who used two or more routes showed a significant decrease from 13.2 to 9.5 (n = 76; P < .01).
“We have many patients who are benefiting from a single route of delivery for chronic orthopedic pain,” Ari Greis, DO, a physical medicine and rehabilitation specialist in Bryn Mawr, Pa., and a coauthor of the MC studies for both back pain and OA, said in an interview. “However, our data shows a greater reduction in opioid consumption in patients using more than one route of delivery.”
He said delivery modes in the studies included vaporized cannabis oil or flower; sublingual tinctures; capsules or tablets; and topical lotions, creams, and salves.
Dr. Greis is the director of the medical cannabis department at Rothman Orthopaedic Institute in Bryn Mawr, and is a senior fellow in the Institute of Emerging Health Professions and the Lambert Center for the Study of Medicinal Cannabis and Hemp, both in Philadelphia.
Medical cannabis also reduces opioids for OA
The same team of researchers, using the data from the PDMP system, showed that medical cannabis also helped reduce opioid use for osteoarthritis.
For patients using opioids for OA, there was a significant decrease in average MME/day of prescriptions filled by patients following MC access – from 18.2 to 9.8 (n = 40; P < .05). The average drop in MME/day was 46.3%. The percentage of patients who stopped using opioids was 37.5%. Pain score on a 0-10 visual analog scale decreased significantly from 6.6 (n = 36) to 5.0 (n = 26; P < .01) at 3 months and 5.4 (n = 16; P < .05) at 6 months.
Gary Stewart, MD, an orthopedic surgeon in Morrow, Ga., who was not part of the studies, told this news organization that the studies offer good preliminary data to offer help with the opioid issue.
“I sometimes feel that we, as orthopedic surgeons and physicians in general, are working with one hand behind our back. We’re taking something that is a heroin or morphine derivative and giving it to our patients when we know it has a high risk of building tolerance and addiction. But at the same time, we have no alternative,” he said.
He said it’s important to remember the results from the relatively small study are preliminary and observational. People used different forms and amounts of MC and the data show only that prescriptions were filled, but not whether the cannabis was used. Prospective, controlled studies where opioids go head-to-head with MC are needed, he said.
“Still, this can lead us to more studies to give us an option [apart from] an opioid that we know is highly addictive,” he said.
Dr. Stewart is a member of the AAOS Opioid Task Force. Dr. Greis and several coauthors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships, and other coauthors report financial ties to companies unrelated to the research presented.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
AT AAOS 2022
Shoulder arthritis surgery: Depression complicates care
CHICAGO – new data show.
The abstract was presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons.
Researchers, led by Keith Diamond, MD, an orthopedic surgeon at Maimonides Medical Center in New York, queried a private payer database looking for patients who had primary RSA for treatment of glenohumeral OA and also had a diagnosis of depressive disorder (DD) from 2010 to 2019. Patients without DD served as the controls.
After the randomized matching with controls at a 1:5 ratio, the study consisted of 28,410 patients: 4,084 in the DD group and 24,326 in the control group.
Researchers found that patients with depression had longer hospital stays (3 vs. 2 days, P = .0007). They also had higher frequency and odds of developing side effects within the period of care (47.4% vs. 14.7%; odds ratio, 2.27; 95% CI, 2.10-2.45, P < .0001).
Patients with depression also had significantly higher rates of medical complications surrounding the surgery and costs were higher ($19,363 vs. $17,927, P < .0001).
Pneumonia rates were much higher in patients with DD (10% vs. 1.8%; OR, 2.88; P < .0001).
Patients with depression had higher odds of cerebrovascular accident (3.1% vs. 0.7%; OR, 2.69, P < .0001); myocardial infarctions (2% vs. 0.4%; OR, 2.54; P < .0001); acute kidney injuries (11.1% vs. 2.3%; OR, 2.11, P < .0001); surgical site infections (4.4% vs. 2.4%; OR, 1.52, P < .0001); and other complications, the authors wrote.
Dr. Diamond said in an interview that there may be a few potential reasons for the associations.
In regard to the strong association with pneumonia, Dr. Diamond hypothesized, “patients with depression can be shown to have lower respiratory drive. If a patient isn’t motivated to get out of bed, that can lead to decreased inflation of the lungs.”
Acute kidney injury could be linked with depression-related lack of self-care in properly hydrating, he said. Surgical site infections could come from suboptimal hygiene related to managing the cast after surgery, which may be more difficult when patients also struggle with depression.
Asked to comment on Dr. Diamond’s study, Grant Garrigues, MD, an associate professor at Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, and director of upper extremity research, told this news organization the study helps confirm known associations between depression and arthritis.
“We know that people with depression and anxiety feel pain differently,” he said. “It might have to do with your outlook – are you catastrophizing or thinking it’s a minor inconvenience? It’s not that it’s just in your head – you physically feel it differently. That is something we’re certainly attuned to. We want to make sure the mental health part of the picture is optimized as much as possible.”
He added that there is increasing evidence of links between depression and the development of arthritis.
“I’m not saying that everyone with arthritis has depression, but with arthritis being multifactorial, there’s a relatively high incidence of symptomatic arthritis in patients with depression,” Dr. Garrigues said.
“We think it may have something to do with the fight-or-flight hormones in your body that may be revved up if you are living in a stressful environment or are living with a mental health problem. Those will actually change – on a cellular and biochemical basis – some of the things that affect arthritis.”
Stronger emphasis on mental health
Dr. Diamond said the field needs more emphasis on perioperative state of mind.
“As orthopedic surgeons, we are preoccupied with the mechanical, the structural aspects of health care as we try to fix bones, ligaments, and tendons. But I think we need to recognize and explore the connection between the psychiatric and psychological health with our musculoskeletal health.”
He noted that, in the preoperative setting, providers look for hypertension, diabetes, smoking status, and other conditions that could complicate surgical outcomes and said mental health should be a factor in whether a surgery proceeds.
“If someone’s diabetes isn’t controlled you can delay an elective case until their [hemoglobin] A1c is under the recommended limit and you get clearance from their primary care doctor. I think that’s something that should be applied to patients with depressive disorders,” Dr. Diamond said.
This study did not distinguish between patients who were being treated for depression at the time of surgery and those not on treatment. More study related to whether treatment affects depression’s association with RSA outcomes is needed, Dr. Diamond added.
Dr. Garrigues said he talks candidly with patients considering surgery about how they are managing their mental health struggles.
“If they say they haven’t seen their psychiatrist or are off their medications, that’s a nonstarter,” he said.
“Anything outside of the surgery you can optimize, whether it’s mental health, medical, social situations – you want to have all your ducks in a row before you dive into surgery,” Dr. Garrigues said.
He added that patients’ mental health status may even affect the venue for the patient – whether outpatient or inpatient, where they can get more supervision and help in making transitions after surgery.
Dr. Diamond and coauthors and Dr. Garrigues disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
CHICAGO – new data show.
The abstract was presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons.
Researchers, led by Keith Diamond, MD, an orthopedic surgeon at Maimonides Medical Center in New York, queried a private payer database looking for patients who had primary RSA for treatment of glenohumeral OA and also had a diagnosis of depressive disorder (DD) from 2010 to 2019. Patients without DD served as the controls.
After the randomized matching with controls at a 1:5 ratio, the study consisted of 28,410 patients: 4,084 in the DD group and 24,326 in the control group.
Researchers found that patients with depression had longer hospital stays (3 vs. 2 days, P = .0007). They also had higher frequency and odds of developing side effects within the period of care (47.4% vs. 14.7%; odds ratio, 2.27; 95% CI, 2.10-2.45, P < .0001).
Patients with depression also had significantly higher rates of medical complications surrounding the surgery and costs were higher ($19,363 vs. $17,927, P < .0001).
Pneumonia rates were much higher in patients with DD (10% vs. 1.8%; OR, 2.88; P < .0001).
Patients with depression had higher odds of cerebrovascular accident (3.1% vs. 0.7%; OR, 2.69, P < .0001); myocardial infarctions (2% vs. 0.4%; OR, 2.54; P < .0001); acute kidney injuries (11.1% vs. 2.3%; OR, 2.11, P < .0001); surgical site infections (4.4% vs. 2.4%; OR, 1.52, P < .0001); and other complications, the authors wrote.
Dr. Diamond said in an interview that there may be a few potential reasons for the associations.
In regard to the strong association with pneumonia, Dr. Diamond hypothesized, “patients with depression can be shown to have lower respiratory drive. If a patient isn’t motivated to get out of bed, that can lead to decreased inflation of the lungs.”
Acute kidney injury could be linked with depression-related lack of self-care in properly hydrating, he said. Surgical site infections could come from suboptimal hygiene related to managing the cast after surgery, which may be more difficult when patients also struggle with depression.
Asked to comment on Dr. Diamond’s study, Grant Garrigues, MD, an associate professor at Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, and director of upper extremity research, told this news organization the study helps confirm known associations between depression and arthritis.
“We know that people with depression and anxiety feel pain differently,” he said. “It might have to do with your outlook – are you catastrophizing or thinking it’s a minor inconvenience? It’s not that it’s just in your head – you physically feel it differently. That is something we’re certainly attuned to. We want to make sure the mental health part of the picture is optimized as much as possible.”
He added that there is increasing evidence of links between depression and the development of arthritis.
“I’m not saying that everyone with arthritis has depression, but with arthritis being multifactorial, there’s a relatively high incidence of symptomatic arthritis in patients with depression,” Dr. Garrigues said.
“We think it may have something to do with the fight-or-flight hormones in your body that may be revved up if you are living in a stressful environment or are living with a mental health problem. Those will actually change – on a cellular and biochemical basis – some of the things that affect arthritis.”
Stronger emphasis on mental health
Dr. Diamond said the field needs more emphasis on perioperative state of mind.
“As orthopedic surgeons, we are preoccupied with the mechanical, the structural aspects of health care as we try to fix bones, ligaments, and tendons. But I think we need to recognize and explore the connection between the psychiatric and psychological health with our musculoskeletal health.”
He noted that, in the preoperative setting, providers look for hypertension, diabetes, smoking status, and other conditions that could complicate surgical outcomes and said mental health should be a factor in whether a surgery proceeds.
“If someone’s diabetes isn’t controlled you can delay an elective case until their [hemoglobin] A1c is under the recommended limit and you get clearance from their primary care doctor. I think that’s something that should be applied to patients with depressive disorders,” Dr. Diamond said.
This study did not distinguish between patients who were being treated for depression at the time of surgery and those not on treatment. More study related to whether treatment affects depression’s association with RSA outcomes is needed, Dr. Diamond added.
Dr. Garrigues said he talks candidly with patients considering surgery about how they are managing their mental health struggles.
“If they say they haven’t seen their psychiatrist or are off their medications, that’s a nonstarter,” he said.
“Anything outside of the surgery you can optimize, whether it’s mental health, medical, social situations – you want to have all your ducks in a row before you dive into surgery,” Dr. Garrigues said.
He added that patients’ mental health status may even affect the venue for the patient – whether outpatient or inpatient, where they can get more supervision and help in making transitions after surgery.
Dr. Diamond and coauthors and Dr. Garrigues disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
CHICAGO – new data show.
The abstract was presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons.
Researchers, led by Keith Diamond, MD, an orthopedic surgeon at Maimonides Medical Center in New York, queried a private payer database looking for patients who had primary RSA for treatment of glenohumeral OA and also had a diagnosis of depressive disorder (DD) from 2010 to 2019. Patients without DD served as the controls.
After the randomized matching with controls at a 1:5 ratio, the study consisted of 28,410 patients: 4,084 in the DD group and 24,326 in the control group.
Researchers found that patients with depression had longer hospital stays (3 vs. 2 days, P = .0007). They also had higher frequency and odds of developing side effects within the period of care (47.4% vs. 14.7%; odds ratio, 2.27; 95% CI, 2.10-2.45, P < .0001).
Patients with depression also had significantly higher rates of medical complications surrounding the surgery and costs were higher ($19,363 vs. $17,927, P < .0001).
Pneumonia rates were much higher in patients with DD (10% vs. 1.8%; OR, 2.88; P < .0001).
Patients with depression had higher odds of cerebrovascular accident (3.1% vs. 0.7%; OR, 2.69, P < .0001); myocardial infarctions (2% vs. 0.4%; OR, 2.54; P < .0001); acute kidney injuries (11.1% vs. 2.3%; OR, 2.11, P < .0001); surgical site infections (4.4% vs. 2.4%; OR, 1.52, P < .0001); and other complications, the authors wrote.
Dr. Diamond said in an interview that there may be a few potential reasons for the associations.
In regard to the strong association with pneumonia, Dr. Diamond hypothesized, “patients with depression can be shown to have lower respiratory drive. If a patient isn’t motivated to get out of bed, that can lead to decreased inflation of the lungs.”
Acute kidney injury could be linked with depression-related lack of self-care in properly hydrating, he said. Surgical site infections could come from suboptimal hygiene related to managing the cast after surgery, which may be more difficult when patients also struggle with depression.
Asked to comment on Dr. Diamond’s study, Grant Garrigues, MD, an associate professor at Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, and director of upper extremity research, told this news organization the study helps confirm known associations between depression and arthritis.
“We know that people with depression and anxiety feel pain differently,” he said. “It might have to do with your outlook – are you catastrophizing or thinking it’s a minor inconvenience? It’s not that it’s just in your head – you physically feel it differently. That is something we’re certainly attuned to. We want to make sure the mental health part of the picture is optimized as much as possible.”
He added that there is increasing evidence of links between depression and the development of arthritis.
“I’m not saying that everyone with arthritis has depression, but with arthritis being multifactorial, there’s a relatively high incidence of symptomatic arthritis in patients with depression,” Dr. Garrigues said.
“We think it may have something to do with the fight-or-flight hormones in your body that may be revved up if you are living in a stressful environment or are living with a mental health problem. Those will actually change – on a cellular and biochemical basis – some of the things that affect arthritis.”
Stronger emphasis on mental health
Dr. Diamond said the field needs more emphasis on perioperative state of mind.
“As orthopedic surgeons, we are preoccupied with the mechanical, the structural aspects of health care as we try to fix bones, ligaments, and tendons. But I think we need to recognize and explore the connection between the psychiatric and psychological health with our musculoskeletal health.”
He noted that, in the preoperative setting, providers look for hypertension, diabetes, smoking status, and other conditions that could complicate surgical outcomes and said mental health should be a factor in whether a surgery proceeds.
“If someone’s diabetes isn’t controlled you can delay an elective case until their [hemoglobin] A1c is under the recommended limit and you get clearance from their primary care doctor. I think that’s something that should be applied to patients with depressive disorders,” Dr. Diamond said.
This study did not distinguish between patients who were being treated for depression at the time of surgery and those not on treatment. More study related to whether treatment affects depression’s association with RSA outcomes is needed, Dr. Diamond added.
Dr. Garrigues said he talks candidly with patients considering surgery about how they are managing their mental health struggles.
“If they say they haven’t seen their psychiatrist or are off their medications, that’s a nonstarter,” he said.
“Anything outside of the surgery you can optimize, whether it’s mental health, medical, social situations – you want to have all your ducks in a row before you dive into surgery,” Dr. Garrigues said.
He added that patients’ mental health status may even affect the venue for the patient – whether outpatient or inpatient, where they can get more supervision and help in making transitions after surgery.
Dr. Diamond and coauthors and Dr. Garrigues disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
AT AAOS 2022
TKA: Posterior-stabilized bearing design ups revision risk
CHICAGO - Posterior-stabilized (PS) bearings used in total knee arthroplasty (TKA) may increase the risk of revision compared with bearings of other design, new data suggest.
That possibility has previously been reported in studies outside the United States, and now an analysis of more than 300,000 cases in the American Joint Replacement Registry (AJRR) suggests it’s the case in the United States as well.
Principal investigator Ryland Kagan, MD, of the department of orthopedic surgery at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland, told this news organization, “What’s unique about our experience in the U.S. is our overall high use of PS implants.”
More than half of TKAs in the United States use the PS bearings; in comparison, in Australia and European countries, PS use is closer to 20%, he said. Because of this disparity, previous studies have not been seen as generalizable to the United States, he said.
Researchers used AJRR data from 2012 to 2019 and identified all primary TKA procedures performed during that period. Cases were linked to supplemental Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services data to find revision procedures that may not have been included in the AJRR database.
Jamil Kendall, MD, an orthopedic resident at OHSU, was first author on the study. The team evaluated patient demographics, polyethylene characteristics, procedure dates, and cause for revision in the 305,279 cases.
Of those cases in which implant characteristics were reported, 161,486 (52.9%) patients received PS bearings, and 143,793 (47.1%) received minimally stabilized bearings.
The researchers compared three minimally stabilized implants (cruciate retaining [CR], anterior stabilized [AS], or pivot bearing designs) with each other for risk and then compared minimally stabilized options as a group with the PS bearings.
They found no significant differences among the three minimally stabilized options.
But revision risk was higher when they compared the minimally stabilized implants with the PS bearing implants. Use of PS bearings had a hazard ratio of 1.25 (95% confidence interval, 1.2-1.3; P < .0001) for all-cause revision and an HR of 1.18 (95% CI, 1.0-1.4; P = .02) for infection.
Among the patients with minimally stabilized bearings, 1,693 (1.2%) underwent revision for any cause, and 334 (0.2%) underwent revision for infection. For patients with PS bearings, 2,406 (1.5%) underwent revision for any cause, and 446 (0.3%) underwent revision for infection.
Even a small difference significant
Dr. Kagan said, “The difference isn’t dramatic, but when you think of the total number of total knee arthroplasties done, you’re talking about millions of procedures. Even with a small increased risk, you’re going to see a large influence for a population.”
Richard Lynn Illgen, MD, director of the University of Wisconsin-Madison joint replacement program, told this news organization this work identifies a trend, but he pointed out that registry-based studies have important limitations.
“They cannot establish causality,” he said. “There are many potential confounding variables and potential selection biases that could affect the study. Specifically, the study did not control for degree of deformity or medical comorbidities. Although some surgeons routinely use PS designs for all primary TKAs, others use PS designs for patients with more severe deformities. It is possible that PS designs were used more frequently in patients with a greater degree of deformity, and this could introduce a selection bias.”
He added that no data were included to enable stratification of groups according to medical comorbidities.
“It is possible that selection bias exists comparing the relative degree of medical comorbidities between patients in the PS TKA and minimally constrained TKA groups,” Dr. Illgen said.
He said further prospective, randomized studies are needed to eliminate selection bias and to better determine whether the observed pattern of increased risk of revision holds up, compared with the minimally supported versions.
The authors acknowledged those limitations, but Dr. Kagan said the high percentage of PS procedures in the United States helps mitigate potential bias.
Dr. Illgen serves as a consultant and developer for Stryker, is chair of the AAOS AJRR Research Projects Subcommittee, and is a member of the AJRR Steering Committee. Dr. Kagan receives research support from KCI, Ortho Development, and Smith & Nephew, where he is also a paid consultant. Dr. Kendall reports no relevant financial relationships. Another coauthor of the study is a paid consultant for 3M, Heraeus, Immunis, Smith & Nephew, Zimmer Biomet, and Total Joint Orthopedics and has stock or stock options in Joint Development.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
CHICAGO - Posterior-stabilized (PS) bearings used in total knee arthroplasty (TKA) may increase the risk of revision compared with bearings of other design, new data suggest.
That possibility has previously been reported in studies outside the United States, and now an analysis of more than 300,000 cases in the American Joint Replacement Registry (AJRR) suggests it’s the case in the United States as well.
Principal investigator Ryland Kagan, MD, of the department of orthopedic surgery at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland, told this news organization, “What’s unique about our experience in the U.S. is our overall high use of PS implants.”
More than half of TKAs in the United States use the PS bearings; in comparison, in Australia and European countries, PS use is closer to 20%, he said. Because of this disparity, previous studies have not been seen as generalizable to the United States, he said.
Researchers used AJRR data from 2012 to 2019 and identified all primary TKA procedures performed during that period. Cases were linked to supplemental Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services data to find revision procedures that may not have been included in the AJRR database.
Jamil Kendall, MD, an orthopedic resident at OHSU, was first author on the study. The team evaluated patient demographics, polyethylene characteristics, procedure dates, and cause for revision in the 305,279 cases.
Of those cases in which implant characteristics were reported, 161,486 (52.9%) patients received PS bearings, and 143,793 (47.1%) received minimally stabilized bearings.
The researchers compared three minimally stabilized implants (cruciate retaining [CR], anterior stabilized [AS], or pivot bearing designs) with each other for risk and then compared minimally stabilized options as a group with the PS bearings.
They found no significant differences among the three minimally stabilized options.
But revision risk was higher when they compared the minimally stabilized implants with the PS bearing implants. Use of PS bearings had a hazard ratio of 1.25 (95% confidence interval, 1.2-1.3; P < .0001) for all-cause revision and an HR of 1.18 (95% CI, 1.0-1.4; P = .02) for infection.
Among the patients with minimally stabilized bearings, 1,693 (1.2%) underwent revision for any cause, and 334 (0.2%) underwent revision for infection. For patients with PS bearings, 2,406 (1.5%) underwent revision for any cause, and 446 (0.3%) underwent revision for infection.
Even a small difference significant
Dr. Kagan said, “The difference isn’t dramatic, but when you think of the total number of total knee arthroplasties done, you’re talking about millions of procedures. Even with a small increased risk, you’re going to see a large influence for a population.”
Richard Lynn Illgen, MD, director of the University of Wisconsin-Madison joint replacement program, told this news organization this work identifies a trend, but he pointed out that registry-based studies have important limitations.
“They cannot establish causality,” he said. “There are many potential confounding variables and potential selection biases that could affect the study. Specifically, the study did not control for degree of deformity or medical comorbidities. Although some surgeons routinely use PS designs for all primary TKAs, others use PS designs for patients with more severe deformities. It is possible that PS designs were used more frequently in patients with a greater degree of deformity, and this could introduce a selection bias.”
He added that no data were included to enable stratification of groups according to medical comorbidities.
“It is possible that selection bias exists comparing the relative degree of medical comorbidities between patients in the PS TKA and minimally constrained TKA groups,” Dr. Illgen said.
He said further prospective, randomized studies are needed to eliminate selection bias and to better determine whether the observed pattern of increased risk of revision holds up, compared with the minimally supported versions.
The authors acknowledged those limitations, but Dr. Kagan said the high percentage of PS procedures in the United States helps mitigate potential bias.
Dr. Illgen serves as a consultant and developer for Stryker, is chair of the AAOS AJRR Research Projects Subcommittee, and is a member of the AJRR Steering Committee. Dr. Kagan receives research support from KCI, Ortho Development, and Smith & Nephew, where he is also a paid consultant. Dr. Kendall reports no relevant financial relationships. Another coauthor of the study is a paid consultant for 3M, Heraeus, Immunis, Smith & Nephew, Zimmer Biomet, and Total Joint Orthopedics and has stock or stock options in Joint Development.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
CHICAGO - Posterior-stabilized (PS) bearings used in total knee arthroplasty (TKA) may increase the risk of revision compared with bearings of other design, new data suggest.
That possibility has previously been reported in studies outside the United States, and now an analysis of more than 300,000 cases in the American Joint Replacement Registry (AJRR) suggests it’s the case in the United States as well.
Principal investigator Ryland Kagan, MD, of the department of orthopedic surgery at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland, told this news organization, “What’s unique about our experience in the U.S. is our overall high use of PS implants.”
More than half of TKAs in the United States use the PS bearings; in comparison, in Australia and European countries, PS use is closer to 20%, he said. Because of this disparity, previous studies have not been seen as generalizable to the United States, he said.
Researchers used AJRR data from 2012 to 2019 and identified all primary TKA procedures performed during that period. Cases were linked to supplemental Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services data to find revision procedures that may not have been included in the AJRR database.
Jamil Kendall, MD, an orthopedic resident at OHSU, was first author on the study. The team evaluated patient demographics, polyethylene characteristics, procedure dates, and cause for revision in the 305,279 cases.
Of those cases in which implant characteristics were reported, 161,486 (52.9%) patients received PS bearings, and 143,793 (47.1%) received minimally stabilized bearings.
The researchers compared three minimally stabilized implants (cruciate retaining [CR], anterior stabilized [AS], or pivot bearing designs) with each other for risk and then compared minimally stabilized options as a group with the PS bearings.
They found no significant differences among the three minimally stabilized options.
But revision risk was higher when they compared the minimally stabilized implants with the PS bearing implants. Use of PS bearings had a hazard ratio of 1.25 (95% confidence interval, 1.2-1.3; P < .0001) for all-cause revision and an HR of 1.18 (95% CI, 1.0-1.4; P = .02) for infection.
Among the patients with minimally stabilized bearings, 1,693 (1.2%) underwent revision for any cause, and 334 (0.2%) underwent revision for infection. For patients with PS bearings, 2,406 (1.5%) underwent revision for any cause, and 446 (0.3%) underwent revision for infection.
Even a small difference significant
Dr. Kagan said, “The difference isn’t dramatic, but when you think of the total number of total knee arthroplasties done, you’re talking about millions of procedures. Even with a small increased risk, you’re going to see a large influence for a population.”
Richard Lynn Illgen, MD, director of the University of Wisconsin-Madison joint replacement program, told this news organization this work identifies a trend, but he pointed out that registry-based studies have important limitations.
“They cannot establish causality,” he said. “There are many potential confounding variables and potential selection biases that could affect the study. Specifically, the study did not control for degree of deformity or medical comorbidities. Although some surgeons routinely use PS designs for all primary TKAs, others use PS designs for patients with more severe deformities. It is possible that PS designs were used more frequently in patients with a greater degree of deformity, and this could introduce a selection bias.”
He added that no data were included to enable stratification of groups according to medical comorbidities.
“It is possible that selection bias exists comparing the relative degree of medical comorbidities between patients in the PS TKA and minimally constrained TKA groups,” Dr. Illgen said.
He said further prospective, randomized studies are needed to eliminate selection bias and to better determine whether the observed pattern of increased risk of revision holds up, compared with the minimally supported versions.
The authors acknowledged those limitations, but Dr. Kagan said the high percentage of PS procedures in the United States helps mitigate potential bias.
Dr. Illgen serves as a consultant and developer for Stryker, is chair of the AAOS AJRR Research Projects Subcommittee, and is a member of the AJRR Steering Committee. Dr. Kagan receives research support from KCI, Ortho Development, and Smith & Nephew, where he is also a paid consultant. Dr. Kendall reports no relevant financial relationships. Another coauthor of the study is a paid consultant for 3M, Heraeus, Immunis, Smith & Nephew, Zimmer Biomet, and Total Joint Orthopedics and has stock or stock options in Joint Development.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
TKA outcomes for age 80+ similar to younger patients
CHICAGO - Patients 80 years or older undergoing primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA) have similar odds of complications, compared with 65- to 79-year-old patients, an analysis of more than 1.7 million cases suggests.
Priscilla Varghese, MBA, MS, and an MD candidate at State University of New York, Brooklyn, led the research, presented at the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons 2022 annual meeting.
Ms. Varghese’s team queried a Medicare claims database for the years 2005-2014 and analyzed information from 295,908 octogenarians and 1.4 million control patients aged 65-79 who received TKA.
Study group patients were randomly matched to controls in a 1:5 ratio according to gender and comorbidities, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, congestive heart failure, diabetes, peripheral vascular disease, and kidney failure.
Octogenarians were found to have higher incidence and odds of 90-day readmission rates (10.59% vs. 9.35%; odds ratio, 1.15; 95% confidence interval, 1.13-1.16; P < .0001).
Hospital stays were also longer (3.69 days ± 1.95 vs. 3.23 days ± 1.83; P < .0001), compared with controls.
Reassuring older patients
However, Ms. Varghese told this news organization she was surprised to find that the older group had equal incidence and odds of developing medical complications (1.26% vs. 1.26%; OR, 0.99; 95% CI, 0.96-1.03; P =.99).
“That’s a really important piece of information to have when we are advising 80-year-olds – to be able to say their risk of adverse outcomes is similar to someone who’s 10 years, 15 years younger,” she said. “It’s really reassuring.”
These results offer good news to older patients who might be hesitant to undergo the surgery, and good news in general as life expectancy increases and people stay active long into their later years, forecasting the need for more knee replacements.
The number of total knee replacements is expected to rise dramatically in the United States.
In a 2017 study published in Osteoarthritis Cartilage, the authors write, “the number of TKAs in the U.S., which already has the highest [incidence rate] of knee arthroplasty in the world, is expected to increase 143% by 2050.”
Thomas Fleeter, MD, an orthopedic surgeon practicing in Reston, Virginia, who was not involved in the study, told this news organization this study reinforces that “it’s OK to do knee replacements in elderly people; you just have to pick the right ones.”
He pointed out that the study also showed that the 80-and-older patients don’t have the added risk of loosening their mechanical components after the surgery, likely because they are less inclined than their younger counterparts to follow surgery with strenuous activities.
In a subanalysis, revision rates were also lower for the octogenarians (0.01% vs. 0.02% for controls).
Octogenarians who had TKA were found to have lower incidence and odds (1.6% vs. 1.93%; OR, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.83-0.88, P < .001) of implant-related complications, compared with the younger group.
The increased length of stay would be expected, Dr. Fleeter said, because those 80-plus may need a bit more help getting out of bed and may not have as much support at home.
A total knee replacement can have the substantial benefit of improving octogenarians’ ability to maintain their independence longer by facilitating driving or walking.
“It’s a small and manageable risk if you pick the right patients,” he said.
Demand for TKAs rises as population ages
As patients are living longer and wanting to maintain their mobility and as obesity rates are rising, more older patients will seek total knee replacements, especially since the payoff is high, Ms. Varghese noted.
“People who undergo this operation tend to show remarkable decreases in pain and increases in range of motion,” she said.
This study has the advantage of a more personalized look at risks of TKA because it stratifies age groups.
“The literature tends to look at the elderly population as one big cohort – 65 and older,” Ms. Varghese said. “We were able to provide patients more specific data.”
Ms. Varghese and Dr. Fleeter have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
CHICAGO - Patients 80 years or older undergoing primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA) have similar odds of complications, compared with 65- to 79-year-old patients, an analysis of more than 1.7 million cases suggests.
Priscilla Varghese, MBA, MS, and an MD candidate at State University of New York, Brooklyn, led the research, presented at the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons 2022 annual meeting.
Ms. Varghese’s team queried a Medicare claims database for the years 2005-2014 and analyzed information from 295,908 octogenarians and 1.4 million control patients aged 65-79 who received TKA.
Study group patients were randomly matched to controls in a 1:5 ratio according to gender and comorbidities, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, congestive heart failure, diabetes, peripheral vascular disease, and kidney failure.
Octogenarians were found to have higher incidence and odds of 90-day readmission rates (10.59% vs. 9.35%; odds ratio, 1.15; 95% confidence interval, 1.13-1.16; P < .0001).
Hospital stays were also longer (3.69 days ± 1.95 vs. 3.23 days ± 1.83; P < .0001), compared with controls.
Reassuring older patients
However, Ms. Varghese told this news organization she was surprised to find that the older group had equal incidence and odds of developing medical complications (1.26% vs. 1.26%; OR, 0.99; 95% CI, 0.96-1.03; P =.99).
“That’s a really important piece of information to have when we are advising 80-year-olds – to be able to say their risk of adverse outcomes is similar to someone who’s 10 years, 15 years younger,” she said. “It’s really reassuring.”
These results offer good news to older patients who might be hesitant to undergo the surgery, and good news in general as life expectancy increases and people stay active long into their later years, forecasting the need for more knee replacements.
The number of total knee replacements is expected to rise dramatically in the United States.
In a 2017 study published in Osteoarthritis Cartilage, the authors write, “the number of TKAs in the U.S., which already has the highest [incidence rate] of knee arthroplasty in the world, is expected to increase 143% by 2050.”
Thomas Fleeter, MD, an orthopedic surgeon practicing in Reston, Virginia, who was not involved in the study, told this news organization this study reinforces that “it’s OK to do knee replacements in elderly people; you just have to pick the right ones.”
He pointed out that the study also showed that the 80-and-older patients don’t have the added risk of loosening their mechanical components after the surgery, likely because they are less inclined than their younger counterparts to follow surgery with strenuous activities.
In a subanalysis, revision rates were also lower for the octogenarians (0.01% vs. 0.02% for controls).
Octogenarians who had TKA were found to have lower incidence and odds (1.6% vs. 1.93%; OR, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.83-0.88, P < .001) of implant-related complications, compared with the younger group.
The increased length of stay would be expected, Dr. Fleeter said, because those 80-plus may need a bit more help getting out of bed and may not have as much support at home.
A total knee replacement can have the substantial benefit of improving octogenarians’ ability to maintain their independence longer by facilitating driving or walking.
“It’s a small and manageable risk if you pick the right patients,” he said.
Demand for TKAs rises as population ages
As patients are living longer and wanting to maintain their mobility and as obesity rates are rising, more older patients will seek total knee replacements, especially since the payoff is high, Ms. Varghese noted.
“People who undergo this operation tend to show remarkable decreases in pain and increases in range of motion,” she said.
This study has the advantage of a more personalized look at risks of TKA because it stratifies age groups.
“The literature tends to look at the elderly population as one big cohort – 65 and older,” Ms. Varghese said. “We were able to provide patients more specific data.”
Ms. Varghese and Dr. Fleeter have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
CHICAGO - Patients 80 years or older undergoing primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA) have similar odds of complications, compared with 65- to 79-year-old patients, an analysis of more than 1.7 million cases suggests.
Priscilla Varghese, MBA, MS, and an MD candidate at State University of New York, Brooklyn, led the research, presented at the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons 2022 annual meeting.
Ms. Varghese’s team queried a Medicare claims database for the years 2005-2014 and analyzed information from 295,908 octogenarians and 1.4 million control patients aged 65-79 who received TKA.
Study group patients were randomly matched to controls in a 1:5 ratio according to gender and comorbidities, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, congestive heart failure, diabetes, peripheral vascular disease, and kidney failure.
Octogenarians were found to have higher incidence and odds of 90-day readmission rates (10.59% vs. 9.35%; odds ratio, 1.15; 95% confidence interval, 1.13-1.16; P < .0001).
Hospital stays were also longer (3.69 days ± 1.95 vs. 3.23 days ± 1.83; P < .0001), compared with controls.
Reassuring older patients
However, Ms. Varghese told this news organization she was surprised to find that the older group had equal incidence and odds of developing medical complications (1.26% vs. 1.26%; OR, 0.99; 95% CI, 0.96-1.03; P =.99).
“That’s a really important piece of information to have when we are advising 80-year-olds – to be able to say their risk of adverse outcomes is similar to someone who’s 10 years, 15 years younger,” she said. “It’s really reassuring.”
These results offer good news to older patients who might be hesitant to undergo the surgery, and good news in general as life expectancy increases and people stay active long into their later years, forecasting the need for more knee replacements.
The number of total knee replacements is expected to rise dramatically in the United States.
In a 2017 study published in Osteoarthritis Cartilage, the authors write, “the number of TKAs in the U.S., which already has the highest [incidence rate] of knee arthroplasty in the world, is expected to increase 143% by 2050.”
Thomas Fleeter, MD, an orthopedic surgeon practicing in Reston, Virginia, who was not involved in the study, told this news organization this study reinforces that “it’s OK to do knee replacements in elderly people; you just have to pick the right ones.”
He pointed out that the study also showed that the 80-and-older patients don’t have the added risk of loosening their mechanical components after the surgery, likely because they are less inclined than their younger counterparts to follow surgery with strenuous activities.
In a subanalysis, revision rates were also lower for the octogenarians (0.01% vs. 0.02% for controls).
Octogenarians who had TKA were found to have lower incidence and odds (1.6% vs. 1.93%; OR, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.83-0.88, P < .001) of implant-related complications, compared with the younger group.
The increased length of stay would be expected, Dr. Fleeter said, because those 80-plus may need a bit more help getting out of bed and may not have as much support at home.
A total knee replacement can have the substantial benefit of improving octogenarians’ ability to maintain their independence longer by facilitating driving or walking.
“It’s a small and manageable risk if you pick the right patients,” he said.
Demand for TKAs rises as population ages
As patients are living longer and wanting to maintain their mobility and as obesity rates are rising, more older patients will seek total knee replacements, especially since the payoff is high, Ms. Varghese noted.
“People who undergo this operation tend to show remarkable decreases in pain and increases in range of motion,” she said.
This study has the advantage of a more personalized look at risks of TKA because it stratifies age groups.
“The literature tends to look at the elderly population as one big cohort – 65 and older,” Ms. Varghese said. “We were able to provide patients more specific data.”
Ms. Varghese and Dr. Fleeter have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.