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Hip

THIRTY-DAY MORTALITY AFTER WEEKEND VERSUS WEEKDAY ELECTIVE JOINT ARTHROPLASTY IN ENGLAND AND WALES: A STUDY USING THE NATIONAL JOINT REGISTRY DATASET

The International Hip Society (IHS), London, England, September 2017



Abstract

With the increasing demand for hip and knee replacement and move towards seven-day services, we examined whether this planned, elective surgery performed at the weekend is associated with a different 30-day mortality versus that performed between Monday and Friday.

The study dataset comprised 118,096 joint replacement episodes performed at the weekend and 1,233,882 episodes done on a weekday. We used a Kaplan-Meier framework to examine the 30-day cumulative mortality rate for all elective hip and knee replacements performed in England and Wales and recorded in the NJR between 1st April 2003 and 31st December 2014, with Cox proportional-hazards regression models to assess for time-dependent variation and adjust for identified risk factors for mortality.

For hip replacement the cumulative 30-day mortality was 0.15% (95%CI: 0.12–0.19) for patients operated on at the weekend versus 0.20% (0.19–0.21) for patients undergoing surgery during the normal working week. For knee replacement the cumulative 30-day mortality was 0.14% (0.11–0.17) for patients operated on at the weekend versus 0.18% (0.17–0.19) for patients undergoing surgery during the normal working week. The lower mortality associated with weekend operating was most apparent in the later years of the audit (2009 to 2014) and remained after adjustment for any differences in patient age, gender, American Society of Anaesthesiologist grade, surgeon seniority, surgical and anaesthetic practices, and thrombo-prophylaxis choice in weekend versus weekday operated patients.

Routine hip and knee replacements performed at the weekend in England and Wales and are not associated with an increased risk of post-operative mortality.


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