• J Bone Joint Surg Am · Jan 2010

    Duration of the increase in early postoperative mortality after elective hip and knee replacement.

    • Stein Atle Lie, Nicole Pratt, Philip Ryan, Lars B Engesaeter, Leif I Havelin, Ove Furnes, and Stephen Graves.
    • Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, The Norwegian Arthroplasty Register, Haukeland University Hospital, N-5021 Bergen, Norway. Stein.Lie@unifob.uib.no
    • J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2010 Jan 1;92(1):58-63.

    BackgroundThere is increased early postoperative mortality after elective joint replacement surgery. However, the magnitude and duration of the increased mortality are uncertain.MethodsData on total knee and total hip replacement from the comprehensive national registries in Australia and Norway were assessed. Only patients between fifty and eighty years of age with osteoarthritis were included. Overall, the study included 81,856 patients with a total knee replacement and 106,254 patients with a total hip replacement. Smoothed intensity curves were calculated to show the change in mortality for the early postoperative period, whereas the effects of risk factors were studied with use of the nonparametric additive Aalen model.ResultsWe found that early postoperative mortality was increased for the first twenty-six postoperative days (95% confidence interval, twenty-two to forty-one days). The excess mortality, compared with a baseline mortality (calculated as the average mortality from Day 100 to Day 200), for these twenty-six days was estimated to be 0.12% (95% confidence interval, 0.11% to 0.14%). The most important risk factors for excessive early postoperative mortality were male sex and high age (more than seventy years of age).ConclusionsThere is an increased, but low, early postoperative mortality following lower extremity joint replacement surgery. The excess mortality persists, but steadily decreases, for approximately the first twenty-six postoperative days.

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