Alexander J. Acuña, Enrico M. Forlenza, Joseph Serino III, Vince K. Morgan, Tad L. Gerlinger, Craig J. Della Valle
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction
Unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) has been shown to improve pain and function in appropriately selected patients. Limited data exists regarding outcomes and complication rates following UKA among octogenarians.
Methods
The PearlDiver Mariner database was queried for patients undergoing primary UKA between 2010–2022. Patients < 80 years old were matched 4:1 to the octogenarian cohort (≥80 years old) by sex, year, Elixhauser Comorbidity Index (ECI), tobacco use, obesity, and diabetes. A total of 1,334 octogenarians and 5,313 controls were included in our analysis. Multivariate logistic regression was utilized to compare medical complications at 90-days post-operatively and surgical complications at 1- and 2-years post-operatively. Our regression analysis controlled for sex, ECI, tobacco use, obesity, and diabetes.
Results
Octogenarians had an increased risk of acute kidney injury (OR: 2.306, 95% CI: 1.393–3.749; p < 0.001), pneumonia (OR: 2.367, 95% CI: 1.301–4.189; p = 0.003), UTI (OR: 1.846, 95% CI: 1.304–2.583; p < 0.001), ED visits (OR: 2.229, 95% CI: 1.586–3.105; p < 0.001), and any complication (OR: 1.575, 95% CI: 1.304–1.895; p < 0.001) at 90-days post-operatively. Octogenarians had lower odds of all-cause revision at 2-years (OR: 0.607, 95% CI: 0.382–0.923; p = 0.026). No differences were demonstrated between cohorts in rates of PJI (OR: 0.832, 95% CI: 0.334–1.796; p = 0.664), periprosthetic fracture (OR: 0.516, 95% CI: 0.120–1.520; p = 0.289), or aseptic loosening (OR: 0.285, 95% CI: 0.045–1.203; p = 0.088) at 2-years.
Discussion
These findings suggest that despite an increased risk of certain medical complications within the acute post-operative period, octogenarians undergoing UKA experienced similar rates of surgical complications to younger matched controls at 2-year follow-up.
期刊介绍:
The Knee is an international journal publishing studies on the clinical treatment and fundamental biomechanical characteristics of this joint. The aim of the journal is to provide a vehicle relevant to surgeons, biomedical engineers, imaging specialists, materials scientists, rehabilitation personnel and all those with an interest in the knee.
The topics covered include, but are not limited to:
• Anatomy, physiology, morphology and biochemistry;
• Biomechanical studies;
• Advances in the development of prosthetic, orthotic and augmentation devices;
• Imaging and diagnostic techniques;
• Pathology;
• Trauma;
• Surgery;
• Rehabilitation.