The National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) produces recommendations on appropriate treatment within the National Health Service (NHS) in England and Wales. The NICE guidelines on prophylaxis for venous thromboembolism in orthopaedic surgery recommend that all patients be offered a low molecular weight heparin (LMWH). The linked hospital episode statistics of 219 602 patients were examined to determine the rates of complications following lower limb arthroplasty for the 12-month periods prior to and following the publication of these guidelines. These were compared with data from the National Joint Registry (England and Wales) regarding the use of LMWH during the same periods. There was a significant increase in the reported use of LMWH (59.5% to 67.6%, p <
0.001) following the publication of the guidelines. However, the 90-day venous thromboembolism events actually increased slightly following total hip replacement (THR, 1.69% to 1.84%, p = 0.06) and remained unchanged following total knee replacement (TKR, 1.99% to 2.04%). Return to theatre in the first 30 days for infection did not show significant changes. There was an increase in the number of patients diagnosed with thrombocytopenia, which was significant following THR (0.11% to 0.16%, p = 0.04). The recommendations from NICE are based on predicted reductions in venous thromboembolism events, reducing morbidity, mortality and costs to the NHS. The early results in orthopaedic patients do not support these predictions, but do show an increase in complications.
Arthroplasty has been shown to generate the most waste among all orthopaedic subspecialties, and it is estimated that hip and knee arthroplasty generate in excess of three million kg of waste annually in the UK. Infectious waste generates up to ten times more CO2 compared with recycled waste, and previous studies have shown that over 90% of waste in the infectious stream is misallocated. We assessed the effect of real-time waste segregation by an unscrubbed team member on waste generation in knee and hip arthroplasty cases, and compared this with a simple educational intervention during the ‘team brief’ at the start of the operating list across two sites. Waste was categorized into five categories: infectious, general, recycling, sharps, and linens. Each category was weighed at the end of each case using a digital weighing scale. At Site A (a tertiary orthopaedic hospital), pre-intervention data were collected for 16 total knee arthroplasy (TKA) and 15 total hip arthroplasty (THA) cases. Subsequently, for ten TKA and ten THA cases, an unscrubbed team member actively segregated waste in real-time into the correct streams. At Site B (a district general hospital), both pre- and post-intervention groups included ten TKA and ten THA cases. The intervention included reminding staff during the ‘team brief’ to segregate waste correctly.Aims
Methods
Access to joint replacement is being restricted for patients with comorbidities in a number of high-income countries. However, there is little evidence on the impact of comorbidities on outcomes. The purpose of this study was to determine the safety and effectiveness of hip and knee arthroplasty in patients with and without comorbidities. In total, 312,079 hip arthroplasty and 328,753 knee arthroplasty patients were included. A total of 11 common comorbidities were identified in administrative hospital records. Safety risks were measured by assessing length of hospital stay (LOS) and 30-day emergency readmissions and mortality. Effectiveness outcomes were changes in Oxford Hip or Knee Scores (OHS/OKS) (scale from 0 (worst) to 48 (best)) and in health-related quality of life (EQ-5D) (scale from 0 (death) to 1 (full health)) from immediately before, to six months after, surgery. Regression analysis was used to estimate adjusted mean differences (LOS, change in OHS/OKS/EQ-5D) and risk differences (readmissions and mortality).Aims
Methods
The aim of this study was to determine if a change
in antibiotic prophylaxis for routine hip and knee replacement was
associated with an increased risk of acute renal impairment. We identified 238 patients (128 knees and 110 hips) who had received
a single prophylactic dose of 1.5 g cefuroxime before joint replacement.
We compared them with prospectively collected data from 254 patients
(117 knees and 137 hips) who received a single prophylactic dose
of 2 g flucloxacillin and a height- and gender-determined dose of
gentamicin. The primary outcome measure was any new renal impairment
as graded by clinically validated criteria. We identified four patients (1.69%) in the cefuroxime group who
developed renal impairment. All four had mild impairment and all
renal function was normal by the third post-operative day. The incidence
of new-onset renal impairment was significantly higher in the flucloxacillin-and-gentamicin
group at 9.45% (24 patients) (p <
0.001). Three of these patients
remained with acute renal impairment after a week, although the
serum creatinine levels in all subsequently returned to normal. Cite this article:
In our department we use an enhanced recovery
protocol for joint replacement of the lower limb. This incorporates the
use of intravenous tranexamic acid (IVTA; 15 mg/kg) at the induction
of anaesthesia. Recently there was a national shortage of IVTA for
18 weeks; during this period all patients received an oral preparation
of tranexamic acid (OTA; 25 mg/kg). This retrospective study compares
the safety (surgical and medical complications) and efficacy (reduction
of transfusion requirements) of OTA and IVTA. During the study period
a total of 2698 patients received IVTA and 302 received OTA. After
adjusting for a range of patient and surgical factors, the odds
ratio (OR) of receiving a blood transfusion was significantly higher
with IVTA than with OTA (OR 0.48 (95% confidence interval 0.26 to
0.89), p = 0.019), whereas the safety profile was similar, based
on length of stay, rate of readmission, return to theatre, deep
infection, stroke, gastrointestinal bleeding, myocardial infarction,
pneumonia, deep-vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. The financial
benefit of OTA is £2.04 for a 70 kg patient; this is amplified when
the cost saving associated with significantly fewer blood transfusions
is considered. Although the number of patients in the study is modest, this
work supports the use of OTA, and we recommend that a randomised
trial be undertaken to compare the different methods of administering
tranexamic acid. Cite this article:
Post-operative complications after total hip
or knee replacement can delay recovery, prolong hospitalisation, increase
rates of re-admission and, in the most severe cases, lead to long-term
disability or even death. In this analysis of pooled data from four
large, randomised, phase III clinical trials that compared the oral,
direct Factor Xa inhibitor rivaroxaban with subcutaneous enoxaparin
for the prevention of venous thromboembolism after total hip or
knee replacement (n = 12 729), the incidence of complications, including
bleeding and adverse events related to surgery (such as wound infection,
wound dehiscence and haemarthrosis) are reported. Interventions
and procedures relating to surgery are also compared between the
groups. Bleeding events, including excessive wound haematoma and
surgical-site bleeding, occurred at similar rates in the rivaroxaban
and enoxaparin groups. Over the total study duration, adverse surgical
events occurred at a similar rate in the rivaroxaban group compared
with the enoxaparin group after total knee replacement (2.26% This analysis shows that the incidence of adverse surgical events
with rivaroxaban was similar to enoxaparin.