This study aims to identify the top unanswered research priorities in the field of knee surgery using consensus-based methodology. Initial research questions were generated using an online survey sent to all 680 members of the British Association for Surgery of the Knee (BASK). Duplicates were removed and a longlist was generated from this scoping exercise by a panel of 13 experts from across the UK who provided oversight of the process. A modified Delphi process was used to refine the questions and determine a final list. To rank the final list of questions, each question was scored between one (low importance) and ten (high importance) in order to produce the final list.Aims
Methods
Obesity is an epidemic across both the developed
and developing nations that is possibly the most important current
public health factor affecting the morbidity and mortality of the global
population. Obese patients have the potential to pose several challenges
for arthroplasty surgeons from the standpoint of the influence obesity
has on osteoarthritic symptoms, their peri-operative medical management,
the increased intra-operative technical demands on the surgeon,
the intra- and post-operative complications, the long term outcomes
of total hip and knee arthroplasty. Also, there is no consensus
on the role the arthroplasty surgeon should have in facilitating
weight loss for these patients, nor whether obesity should affect
the access to arthroplasty procedures.