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Physicians Debate the Benefits of Minimally Invasive Surgery on Hips and Knees
03/11/2004
SAN FRANCISCO -- Arthritis and other disabling diseases have caused tremendous human suffering since the dawn of civilization, but not until the 1960s did physicians find a good way to replace diseased and injured joints with new ones. While replacement components have undergone generations of improvements since then, the operations themselves have changed little until lately, as minimally invasive procedures have been introduced. Four orthopaedic surgeons share their experiences and debate these issues at a panel briefing of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons' 71st annual meeting this week. Hip replacement When less is more Approximately 300,000 hip replacements are performed annually in the United States alone, according to Thomas P. Sculco, MD, surgeon-in-chief at the Hospital for Special Surgery, and professor of orthopaedic surgery at the Weill Medical College of Cornell University in New York. Sculco began performing minimally invasive surgeries (MIS) for total hip replacements in 1996 as a response to his patients' expressed displeasure with the cosmetic appearance of the standard procedure, as well as their desire for a more rapid recovery, a reduced length of stay, and a reduction in cost.
Minimally invasive procedures, using a 6 to 10 cm. incision, have become routine for 95 percent of his patients, Sculco says. With the right patient, these techniques result in less soft tissue trauma and less time in surgery. In Sculco's experience, MIS decreases the blood loss and allows patients an earlier return to a normal gait without an increased risk for complications.
"I have used this less invasive technique in more than 1,500 patients. My observation is that these patients recover more quickly and lose their limp and need for a cane more quickly than with the standard approach," he says. "There has been no increase in complications in my experience with this approach in terms of wound problems, dislocation of the implant, or inferior results when evaluated by X-rays." Outpatient hips, anyone? In the past, in-patient hospitalization following standard total hip replacement frequently exceeded several weeks. During the 1990s, however, MIS techniques such as those designed by Sculco reduced the length of stay to a few days. Even more recently, Richard A. Berger, MD, assistant professor of orthopaedic surgery at Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center, developed and implemented comprehensive protocols for before, during, and after surgery to assess the feasibility and safety of total hip replacement on an outpatient basis.
"With MIS, outpatient surgery is feasible," he says. "We have shown in the past three years that it is also safe. Every patient of ours who has had surgery in 2003 has gone home the same day!"
Discharge is permitted only when strict criteria are met, Berger explains. In addition to exhibiting stable vital signs, the patient must be able to get in and out of both a bed and a chair independently, walk 100 feet, and ascend and descend a full flight of stairs. Further, the patient must be able to tolerate a regular diet and have adequate pain control from oral analgesics. Berger says his patients are walking down the hall four or five hours after surgery and they feel great. "They say, 'You're right. I feel good. I can get around.' I say to them, if you want to stay in the hospital you can, but they look me right in the eye and say, 'I want to go home.'
"Patients were afraid to go home in the past," Berger says. "Specifically, they feared uncontrollable pain, developing a complication, having a slower recovery, and being dependent on someone else. Once these fears were dispelled, it made all the difference."
The first surgeon in the world to offer MIS in an outpatient package, Berger currently uses minimally invasive approaches for almost all of his patients, who are making a speedy recovery. On average, they discontinue crutches and drive within six days, return to work in eight days, and walk without a cane in nine days. They resume activities of daily living within 10 days, and those who wish can walk a half mile within 16 days! This is an order of magnitude faster than has ever been done in hip replacement," Berger says. Knee replacement A skeptic's point of view More than 325,000 knees are replaced each year in the United States, and that number is growing dramatically. Hundreds of thousands of people each year, therefore, will be looking to identify the best knee replacement procedures for this surgery. David S. Hungerford, MD, professor in the department of orthopedic surgery at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, believes there is no convincing evidence that the patient will benefit in any meaningful way from minimally invasive total knee replacements.
Hungerford says he reviewed 275 revision standard total knee replacements performed at Johns Hospital Medical Center between 1987 and 1997 and came away a skeptic.
"During this 10-year period, the surgeons involved in the study performed approximately 3,000 total knee replacements of which about 275 were re- operations," he says. "Although a few of the re-operations were cases that were done by the study surgeons, originally, the vast majority were ones that were performed by surgeons all over the country. "
From reviewing the pre-operative X-rays of these 275 knees, Hungerford determined that 75 percent had technical failures; i.e., they were malaligned.
"If the surgeon, with full exposure, cannot reproducibly and reliably align the knee, what will the outcome be with limited exposure? If MIS becomes widespread in total knee replacement, there will be a significant and predictable increase in the number of technical failures," he predicts.
Hungerford suggests that patients be wary of so-called revolutionary advances. "Ask the surgeon how many cases he has done using this new technique," he says.
"I have similar reservations for the hip, but not to the same extent as for the knee. The whole issue of incision size is being blown out of proportion. It is not something that should be touted as the next best 'latest and greatest' until it is proven to be so. "I would not even consider it," he says. Long-term gains fuel surgeon's efforts Like Hungerford, Peter M. Bonutti, MD, FACS, of St. Anthony's Memorial Hospital in Effingham, Ill. bases his opinions about minimally invasive knee replacements on personal experience. In contrast to Hungerford, however, Bonutti's experiences have been positive with an evolutionary approach.
Bonutti agrees that minimally invasive knee surgeries definitely are more difficult procedures to perform and says surgeons should move ahead slowly or risk significant complications. With the experience of more than 500 such surgeries behind him since 1999, however, he has been able to do these surgeries successfully with incisions as small as 6 cm. A major feature of MIS, he points out, is to avoid everting the patella and dislocating the tibio-femoral joint and reducing damage to the quad mechanism.
While Bonutti is pleased to improve the short-term benefits of knee surgery, improving the long-term benefits is his passion. "Unlike total hip replacements, which patients are extremely happy with, total knee replacement patients always have a disability. "There is permanent functional deterioration because the muscles have been cut." Standard surgery traumatizes the muscle so much that patients cannot walk down a slope or kneel down to pick something up. "These are activities of daily living," he says. "In my opinion, this is what minimally invasive surgery on knees is all about."
After four years, Bonutti's patients continue to do well in the long term. They do well in the short term, too. While his discharge criteria are very strict, he confesses, his patients are going home independently within three days after surgery, as opposed to five days. And they are walking independently with a cane and even driving within about 12 days -- compared with 8 to 12 weeks with standard surgery.
"The driving force for me is my patients," says Bonutti. "I want to help them get back to their lifestyle more quickly and with better functional results. This is what medicine is all about."
The debate on surgical technique is not over. Orthopaedic surgeons review each patient's case individually and the decision about optimum surgical technique is always made after weighing many factors, including the surgeon's advice, as well as patient input.
The 27,156-member American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons is a not-for-profit organization that provides education programs for orthopaedic surgeons, allied health professionals, and the public. The Academy's annual meeting is being held March 10-14, 2004, at the Moscone Center in San Francisco. Source American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons
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