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Trajectories of pain and function in the first five years after total hip and knee arthroplasty

J. Dainty, Toby O. Smith, Emma Clark, Michael R. Whitehouse, Andrew Price, Alex J. MacGregor

2021The Bone & Joint Journal50 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

AIMS: To determine the trajectories of patient reported pain and functional disability over five years following total hip arthroplasty (THA) or total knee arthroplasty (TKA). METHODS: A prospective, longitudinal cohort sub-study within the National Joint Registry (NJR) was undertaken. In all, 20,089 patients who underwent primary THA and 22,489 who underwent primary TKA between 2009 and 2010 were sent Oxford Hip Score (OHS) and Oxford Knee Score (OKS) questionnaires at six months, and one, three, and five years postoperatively. OHS and OKS were disaggregated into pain and function subscales. A k-means clustering procedure assigned each patient to a longitudinal trajectory group for pain and function. Ordinal regression was used to predict trajectory group membership using baseline OHS and OKS score, age, BMI, index of multiple deprivation, sex, ethnicity, geographical location, and American Society of Anesthesiologists grade. RESULTS: Data described two discrete trajectories for pain and function: 'level 1' responders (around 70% of cases) in whom a high level of improvement is sustained over five years, and 'level 2' responders who had sustained improvement, but at a lower level. Baseline patient variables were only weak predictors of pain trajectory and modest predictors of function trajectory. Those with worse baseline pain and function tended to show a greater likelihood of following a 'level 2' trajectory. Six-month patient-reported outcome measures data reliably predicted the class of five-year outcome trajectory for both pain and function. CONCLUSION: 2021;103-B(6):1111-1118.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineOxford knee scoreArthroplastyPhysical therapyOsteoarthritisCohortGeneralized estimating equationPhysical medicine and rehabilitationSurgeryInternal medicineMathematicsAlternative medicinePathologyStatisticsTotal Knee Arthroplasty OutcomesOrthopaedic implants and arthroplastyAnesthesia and Pain Management
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