Periprosthetic joint infections (PJIs) centers are garnering the attention of different arthroplasty surgeons and practices alike. Nonetheless, their value has yet to be proven. Therefore, we evaluated weather PJI centers produce comparable outcomes to the national average of THA PJIs on a national cohort. We performed a retrospective review of patient data available on PearlDiver from 2015 – 2021. PJI THA cases were identified through ICD-10 and CPT codes. Patients treated by 6 fellowship trained arthroplasty surgeons from a PJI center were matched based on age, gender, Charlson Comorbidity Index and Elixhauser comorbidity index at a 1:1 ratio to patients from the national cohort. Compared outcomes included LOS, ED visits, number of patients readmitted, total readmissions. Sample sized did not allow the evaluation of amputation, fusion or explantation. Normality was tested through the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test. And comparisons were made with Students t-tests and Chi Square testing. A total of 33,001 THA PJIs and were identified. A total of 77 patients were identified as treated by the PJI center cohort and successfully matched. No differences were noted in regard to age, gender distribution, CCI or ECI (p=1, 1, 1 and 0.9958 respectively). Significant differences were noted in mean LOS (p<0.43), number of patients requiring readmissions (p=0.001) and total number of readmission events (p<0.001). No difference was noted on ED visits. Our study demonstrates that a PJI for THA cases may be beneficial for the national growing trend of arthroplasty volume. Future data, that allows comparison of patient's specific data will allow for further validation of PJI centers and how these can play a role in helping the national PJI growing problem.
The American Joint Replacement Registry (AJRR) is the largest registry of total hip and knee arthroplasty (THA and TKA) procedures performed in the U.S. The National (Nationwide) Inpatient Sample (NIS) is a public database containing demographic estimates based on more than seven million hospitalizations annually. The purpose of this study was to analyze whether AJRR data is representative of the national experience with TJA as represented in NIS Cohen's d effect sizes were computed to ascertain the magnitude of differences in demographics, hospital volume (in 50 patient increments), and geographic characteristics between the AJRR and NIS databases.Introduction
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In the United States, cementless femoral fixation remains the dominant mode of fixation for femoral neck fractures, despite strong worldwide registry data that supports cemented fixation. The reason for this discrepancy remains unknown, controversial and often difficult to compare due to multiple variables. The purpose of this study was to evaluate a matched cohort of patients undergoing arthroplasty for femoral neck fractures and assess outcomes of revisions, periprosthetic fractures and mortality. This is an exact matched cohort study. Cemented fixation cases were exact matched to cementless fixation cases in a 1:1 fashion based on age, sex and Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI). Outcome variables included: revision for periprosthetic fracture; all cause revision and mortality at any time point; all cause revision and mortality within 1-year and within 90-days. The primary independent variable was femoral fixation (cemented, cementless) and covariates included race (black, white, other), ethnicity (hispanic, non-hispanic), teaching status (minor, major, nonteaching) and bedsize (1–99, 100–399, >=400). Chi-square tests and multivariable logistic regression models were used for statistical analysis.Introduction
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Bundled Payments (BP) were a revolutionary new experiment for CMS that tested whether risk sharing for an episode of care would improve quality and reduce costs. The initial success of BP accelerated their growth as evidence by the launch of both mandatory and commercial bundles. Success in BP is dependent on the target price and the opportunity to reduce avoidable costs during the episode of care. There is concern that the aggressive target pricing methodology in the new model (BPCI-Advanced) penalizes high performing groups that already achieved low episode costs through prior experience and investment in BP. We hypothesize that this methodology incorporates unsustainable downward trends on target prices to a point beyond reasonableness for efficient groups to reduce additional costs and will lead to a large percentage of groups opting out of BPCI-A in favor of a return to fee for service (FFS) reimbursement. Using CMS data, we compared the target price factors for hospitals that participated in both BPCI classic (2013 –2018) and BPCI Advanced (beginning 10/2018), referred to as “legacy hospitals”, with hospitals that only participated in BPCI Advanced (beginning 10/2018). With the rebasing of BPCI-A target prices in Jan 2020 and the opportunity for participants to drop out of individual episode types or the program all together, we compared the retention of episode types that hospitals initially enrolled at the onset of BPCI-A with the current enrollment in 2020. Locally, we analyzed the BPCI-A target price factors across hospitals for a large orthopaedic practice that participated in BPCI Classic and the impact it had on the financial incentive/disincentive to remain in the lower extremity joint replacement episode type in 2020.Introduction
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Patients with FNF may be treated by either total hip arthroplasty (THA) or hemiarthroplasty (HA). Utilizing American Joint Replacement Registry (AJRR) data, we aimed to evaluate outcomes in FNF treatment. Medicare patients with FNF treated with HA or THA reported to the AJRR database from 2012–2019 and CMS claims data from 2012–2017 were analyzed in this retrospective cohort study. “Early” was defined as less than 90 days from index procedure. A logistic regression model, including index arthroplasty, age, sex, stem fixation method, hospital size1, hospital teaching affiliation1, and Charlson comorbidity index (CCI), was utilized to determine associations between index procedure and revision rates.Introduction
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Debridement, Antibiotics and Implant Retention (DAIR) remains the norm for the treatment of acute periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) despite less than optimal success rates. Intraosseous (IO) administration of vancomycin has been shown to have significantly increased local bone and tissue concentrations compared to systemic antibiotics, with lower systemic antibiotic levels compared to intravenous. The purpose of this study was to evaluate if the addition of IO regional antibiotics to our protocol at the time of DAIR would improve outcomes. A retrospective review of 35 PJI TKA patients who underwent DAIR combined with IO vancomycin (500mg) was performed with minimum 12-month follow-up. 26 patients were treated for acute perioperative or acute hematogenous infections following primary TKA. Nine were treated for chronic infections with components that were considered unresectable (ie) constructs with ingrown cones, sleeves, or long cemented stems in elderly comorbid patients. Primary outcome was defined by no reoperations for infection nor clinical signs or symptoms of PJI.Introduction
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The COVID-19 pandemic caused an abrupt disruption in fellowship training, with most in-person teaching ceasing in mid-March 2020. An online lecture series was quickly initiated named the Fellows Online COVID-19 AAHKS Learning (FOCAL) initiative. This study will summarize the results of that initiative. Beginning March 31, 2020, an online teaching program was initiated. Adult reconstruction fellows and senior residents with interest in adult reconstruction were invited to participate in the free, live, online education sessions. Faculty from well-respected training institutions from around the country volunteered their time to host the initiative, choosing topics to present, ranging from hip (13 lectures) and knee (9), to practice management/miscellaneous (12). All sessions were recorded and posted on the society website for viewing. Attendee registrations were tracked via the online platform and the maximum number of attendees per session was recorded. A survey was administered to attendees for feedback.Background
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Dual mobility bearings are an attractive treatment option to obtain hip stability during challenging primary and revision total hip arthroplasty (THA) cases. Despite growing enthusiasm in the United States, long-term results of modern dual mobility implants are lacking. The purpose of this study is to analyze data submitted to the American Joint Replacement Registry (AJRR) to characterize utilization trends of dual mobility bearings in the United States. All primary and revision THA procedures reported to AJRR from 2012–2018 were analyzed. Patients of all ages were included and subdivided into dual mobility and traditional bearing surface cohorts. Independent variables included patient demographics, geographic region, hospital size, and teaching affiliation. Associations were determined by chi-square analysis and a logistic regression was performed to assess the association between dual mobility and independent variables.Background
Methods
Two-stage exchange arthroplasty remains the gold standard for treatment of PJI with reported success rates of 85–90%. Complications that occur during treatment are often not reported or considered in the success rate. The purpose of this study was to analyze complications in patients undergoing two-stage exchange and determine when they occur. We analyzed all patients that underwent two-stage exchange arthroplasty for treatment of chronic PJI of the knee from 2010 to 2018. We categorized complications as medical vs. surgical. The intervals for complications were divided into: interstage, early post re-implant (3 months) and late post re-implant (3 months to minimum 1 year). Minimum follow-up to evaluate complications was one year.Introduction
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Despite evidence-based recommendations opioids and benzodiazepines are commonly prescribed to treat osteoarthritis. This study aims to quantify the prevalence of opioid and benzodiazepine prescriptions given for the primary diagnosis of osteoarthritis across a large healthcare system. Additionally, we aim to characterize risk factors for drug misuse, abuse, and diversion. We conducted a descriptive analysis of adult patient encounters with a primary diagnosis of osteoarthritis during a one-year time period from Jan –Dec 2016 at a large, healthcare system. Demographic data, prescription data, patient-specific prescription drug use risk criteria were collected. Descriptive analysis was conducted to characterize the population of arthritis patients who received prescription opioids. The rate of controlled substance prescribing was calculated for the population as a whole and among subgroups (age, facility type, and patient risk profile).Introduction
Methods
Morbid obesity (BMI>40) is a significant risk factor for complications following total joint arthroplasty (TJA). As such many have a restrictive practice of withholding elective primary TJA in the morbidly obese. The purpose of this study was to observe the implications of this practice. From 2012 to 2014, 289 patients with morbid obesity and end-stage OA of the hip or knee were prospectively followed. At initial visit, patients were given a packet on risks of TJA in the morbidly obese and referral information to a weight loss clinic. Patients were contacted at 6, 12, 18 and 24 months from initial visit for PROs, and BMI changes. The average age of patients was 56 (26.7–79.1) there were 218 females and 71 males.Introduction
Methods
The American Joint Replacement Registry (AJRR) was created to capture total hip (THA) and total knee arthroplasty (TKA) procedural data in order to conduct implant-specific survivorship analyses, produce risk-adjusted patient outcome data, and provide hospitals and surgeons with quality benchmarks. The purpose of this study is to compare early reports from the AJRR to other national registries to identify similarities and differences in surgeon practice and potential topics for future analysis. Hip arthroplasty data were extracted from the annual reports from the AJRR and other national registries including: the Australian registry; the New Zealand registry; the United Kingdom, Wales, and Isle of Man registry; the Norwegian registry; and the Swedish registry from 2014 to 2016. Data regarding femoral and acetabular fixation, bearing surface type, femoral head size, the use of dual mobility articulation bearings, hip resurfacing utilization, and THA revision burden were evaluated. Revision burden is defined as the ratio of implant revisions to the total number of arthroplasties performed in a given time period. Registry characteristics and patient demographic data were recorded across all registries. The results were compared between the various registries and reported using descriptive statistics.Introduction
Methods