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Out Patient Surgery for Total Knee and Hip Replacement and Unicompartmental Knee Replacement - a Feasibility Study

K

Kirill Gromov

Status

Completed

Conditions

Osteoarthritis

Treatments

Other: Does not fulfil of discharge criteria on the day of the surgery
Other: Does fulfil of discharge criteria on the day of the surgery

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02544620
HVH-SK-TKA-THA-UKA

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to evaluate feasibly of outpatient Total Knee Replacement, Total Hip Replacement and Unicompartmental Knee Replacement in a modern fast-track setup. The design is as an observational prospective study, evaluating patients that fulfil discharge criteria on the day of the surgery. The investigators will further evaluate safety aspects, such a early morbidity and mortality, as well as patient satisfaction.

Full description

Fast-track total hip arthroplasty (THA), total knee arthroplasty (TKA) and Unicompartmental Knee arthroplasty (UKA) with length of stay (LOS) of 1-3 is a well established concept for treating hip and knee osteoarthritis, resulting in short reconvalescence, high patient satisfaction, and an excellent safety profile (lower or similar mortality / morbidity compared to conventional pathways with longer LOS). LOS have been significantly reduced during the past decade, and several centers have published even shorter hospitals stays: <24 hours, with patients staying the night at the hospital but also outpatient surgery, with patients being discharged on the day of surgery.

However, these proposed pathways with extremely short LOS, are performed on very selected patients, with few details on patient satisfaction, outcome and most important patient safety. Therefore, it is not possible to draw conclusions on feasibility of outpatient THA, TKA and UKA surgery in a general and unselected population. Further on, there is a need for investigation of safety aspects of outpatient surgery in respect to mortality, morbidity, patient satisfaction and patient reported outcomes. As some, most likely healthy and younger, patients might benefit from outpatient surgery - eg discharge on the day of surgery, while others might not; the first step is to identify the patients that are suitable for outpatient THA and TKA surgery and investigate the safety aspects in respect to mortality, morbidity, patient satisfaction and patient reported outcomes.

Aim:

The aim of this study is to investigate "feasibility" and "safety" of outpatient THA, TKA and UKA surgery, respectively as follows:

Feasibility

  • Proportion of patients, that can be included in the study according to inclusion criteria stated below, and be evaluated for potential same-day discharge (I) (I = included)
  • Proportion of included patients (I), that are discharged on the day of surgery (U) and those who are not discharged and stay for >1 day (B)
  • Identify reasons for patients not being able to be discharged on the day of surgery (B)

Safety

  • risk for complications (morbidity) in group (U) compared to group (B) (are there complications that potentially could have been avoided is the patient was not discharged)
  • readmissions in group (U ) compared to group (B) within 90 days
  • mortality in group (U ) compared to group (B) within 90 days
  • patient satisfaction in group (U ) compared to group (B)
  • Patient reported outcome (Oxford knee score + range of motion for TKA and UKA group, and Oxford hip score for THA group) in group (U) compared to group (B)
  • contacts to primary sector in group (U ) compared to group (B) within 7 days.
  • use of rescue morphine (pain journal) for 7 days post op in group (U ) compared to group (B)

Enrollment

1,000 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Unselected primary THA/TKA
  • ASA score I/II
  • Can be operated as #1 or #2
  • No sleep apnea treated with CPAP

Exclusion criteria

  • Selected primary THA/TKA
  • ASA score > 2
  • Cannot be operated as #1 or #2
  • Sleep apnea treated with CPAP

Trial design

1,000 participants in 3 patient groups

Total Hip arthroplasty
Description:
* Unselected primary THA * American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) score I/II * Can be operated as #1 or #2 * No sleep apnea treated with Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP)
Treatment:
Other: Does not fulfil of discharge criteria on the day of the surgery
Other: Does fulfil of discharge criteria on the day of the surgery
Total Knee arthroplasty
Description:
* Unselected primary TKA * American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) score I/II * Can be operated as #1 or #2 * No sleep apnea treated with Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP)
Treatment:
Other: Does not fulfil of discharge criteria on the day of the surgery
Other: Does fulfil of discharge criteria on the day of the surgery
unicompartmental knee arthroplasty
Description:
* Unselected primary UKA * American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) score I/II * Can be operated as #1 or #2 * No sleep apnea treated with Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP)
Treatment:
Other: Does not fulfil of discharge criteria on the day of the surgery
Other: Does fulfil of discharge criteria on the day of the surgery

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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