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Title: Should Medicare Remove Total Knee Arthroplasty From Its Inpatient Only List? A Total Knee Arthroplasty Is Not a Partial Knee Arthroplasty. Author: Courtney PM, Froimson MI, Meneghini RM, Lee GC, Della Valle CJ. Journal: J Arthroplasty; 2018 Jul; 33(7S):S23-S27. PubMed ID: 29199061. Abstract: BACKGROUND: The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services have solicited comments to consider removing total knee arthroplasty (TKA) from the Inpatient Only list, as it has done for unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA). The purpose of this study is to determine whether Medicare-aged patients undergoing TKA had comparable outcomes to those undergoing UKA. METHODS: We queried the American College of Surgeons-National Surgical Quality Improvement Program database for all patients aged 65 years or older who underwent elective TKA or UKA from 2014 and 2015. Demographic variables, comorbidities, length of stay (LOS), 30-day complication, and readmission rates were compared between UKA and TKA patients. A multivariate regression analysis was then performed to identify independent risk factors for complications and hospital LOS greater than 1 day. RESULTS: Of the 50,487 patients in the study, there were 49,136 (97%) TKA patients and 1351 UKA patients (3%). Medicare-aged TKA patients had a longer mean LOS (2.97 vs 1.57 days, P < .001), had a higher complication rate (9% vs 3%, P < .001), and were more likely to be discharged to a rehabilitation facility (31% vs 9%, P < .001) than Medicare-aged UKA patients. When controlling for other variables, TKA patients were more likely to experience a complication (odds ratio, 2.562; P < .001) and require LOS >1 day (odds ratio, 14.679; P < .001) than UKA patients. CONCLUSION: TKA procedure in the Medicare population is an independent risk factor for increased complications and LOS compared to UKA. Policymakers should use caution extrapolating UKA data to TKA patients and recognize the inherent disparities between the 2 procedures.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]