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Predictors of outcomes of total knee replacement surgery
- Source :
- Rheumatology. 51:1804-1813
- Publication Year :
- 2012
- Publisher :
- Oxford University Press (OUP), 2012.
-
Abstract
- Objective: to identify pre-operative predictors of patient-reported outcomes of primary total knee replacement (TKR) surgery. Methods: the Elective Orthopaedic Centre database is a large prospective cohort of 1991 patients receiving primary TKR in south-west London from 2005 to 2008. The primary outcome is the 6-month post-operative Oxford Knee Score (OKS). To classify whether patients had a clinically important outcome, we calculated a patient acceptable symptom state (PASS) for the 6-month OKS related to satisfaction with surgery. Potential predictor variables were pre-operative OKS, age, sex, BMI, deprivation, surgical side, diagnosis, operation type, American Society of Anesthesiologists grade and EQ5D anxiety/depression. Regression modelling was used to identify predictors of outcome. Results: the strongest determinants of outcome include pre-operative pain/function—those with less severe pre-operative disease obtain the best outcomes; diagnosis in relation to pain outcome—patients with RA did better than those with OA; deprivation—those living in poorer areas had worse outcomes; and anxiety/depression—worse pre-operative anxiety/depression led to worse pain. Differences were observed between predictors of pain and functional outcomes. Diagnosis of RA and anxiety/depression were associated with pain, whereas age and gender were specifically associated with function. BMI was not a clinically important predictor of outcome. Conclusion: this study identified clinically important predictors of attained pain/function post-TKR. Predictors of pain were not necessarily the same as functional outcomes, which may be important in the context of a patient’s expectations of surgery. Other predictive factors need to be identified to improve our ability to recognize patients at risk of poor TKR outcomes
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
business.industry
medicine.medical_treatment
Mixed anxiety-depressive disorder
Context (language use)
medicine.disease
Arthroplasty
Patient satisfaction
Rheumatology
Quality of life
Physical therapy
medicine
Anxiety
Pharmacology (medical)
medicine.symptom
Prospective cohort study
business
Oxford knee score
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14620332 and 14620324
- Volume :
- 51
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Rheumatology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c5b2dcb86ac9710691e56d84d48a1544
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/kes075