BRUSSELS – Middle-aged Americans seem to have embraced total knee replacement, with the number of surgeries more than tripling from 68,000 in 1997 to 221,000 in 2007, according to data collected in the Nationwide Inpatient Sample.
This increase, which helped drive an overall doubling of all U.S. total knee replacements during 1997-2007, did not result merely from the growing prevalence of obesity and the demographic growth of the 45- to 64-year-old age group, judging from the findings from further analysis of the data. Those two factors accounted for at most a quarter of the increase, Elena Losina, Ph.D., reported in a poster at the World Congress on Osteoarthritis.
A combination of additional factors may explain the rest of the rise, she said in an interview. These include:
• A rise in sports injuries that have led to posttraumatic arthritis, a trend exacerbated by the increased sports participation that began in the late 20th century.
• Increased willingness of surgeons to perform total knee replacement on patients younger than 65.
• Increased familiarity and comfort with the surgery – which did not become available until the late 1970s – leading to increased demand by younger patients.
“It’s a combination of more early, advanced arthritis, shifting indications, and more willingness to operate,” said Dr. Losina, codirector of the Orthopedics and Arthritis Center for Outcomes Research at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. “More and more patients have been referred and at least consider surgery.”
“Are patients in the [45- to 64-year-old] age group being offered surgery and accepting surgery more often? Is it because there is more osteoarthritis because of injury? Does it reflect patient demand in that age group? It’s all speculation,” agreed Dr. Jeffrey N. Katz, director of the center, and professor of medicine and orthopedic surgery at Harvard Medical School in Boston.
Some of the same factors also drove increased knee-replacement rates in patients aged 65-84 years, but the slope of the rise was not nearly as steep. In the group aged 65-84 years old, the number of U.S. total knee replacement surgeries rose 66% from 183,000 in 1997 to 303,000 in 2007. The absolute rise of 120,000 additional surgeries in the elderly clearly trailed the 153,000 increase in middle-aged U.S. adults.
But these numbers may not remain on their current trajectory. The surgery is not sustainable, Dr. Losina at the congress, sponsored by the Osteoarthritis Research Society International.
“I think the growth will level off. I think Medicare will be capped, forcing patients to pay for knee replacement out of pocket, and eligibility criteria will tighten,” she said. Currently, “we don’t know what proportion of the surgery is appropriate,” she added.
Another unknown is what middle-aged patients who receive knee replacements can expect about the eventual need for revision surgery. “It would be very surprising if revision rates were not higher in younger patients,” said Dr. Katz, who coauthored the poster.
Younger patients sometimes try to resume the activities that initially drove them to knee surgery. “We need to study [revision] data from younger patients. The burden of revision in younger patients is unknown; it hasn’t been studied.” Dr. Losina said. “We know that prosthetic knees are durable in older patients, but in older patients there is a strong, competing risk from mortality.” In the elderly, the revision rate for total knee replacement is roughly 1% per year following surgery.
“It’s a very successful surgery. People are miserable and can’t move and function because of their knee problems and total knee replacement brings them back to life. I think that explains the greater willingness” to use knee surgery on younger patients. “But we need to understand the societal and population implications of the trend we see,” Dr. Losina said.
Her study used data collected in the Nationwide Inpatient Sample by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, which currently collects data from more than 1,000 hospitals in 42 states. The data showed steady growth in the number of total U.S. knee replacements done, with roughly a doubling overall from 1997 to a national total of 550,000 in 2007, a period when the U.S. population grew by just 15%.
Disclosures: Dr. Losina and Dr. Katz had no relevant disclosures.