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Knee

SUPPORT AND TREATMENT AFTER JOINT REPLACEMENT (STAR): TRANSLATING TRIAL FINDINGS INTO NHS PRACTICE

The British Association for Surgery of the Knee (BASK) May 2023 Meeting, London, England, 16–17 May 2023.



Abstract

Abstract

Introduction

Total knee replacement (TKR) aims to reduce pain and functional limitations. Despite a good outcome for many, 15–20% patients report chronic pain three months after TKR.

The STAR Care Pathway is a clinically important and cost effective treatment to improve pain outcomes over 1 year for people with chronic pain at 3 months after total knee replacement surgery. The care pathway is delivered by specially trained Extended Scope Practitioners (ESPs).

There is a gap between research findings and translation into practice. This work shows how the STAR trial findings were implemented into NHS practice at a single centre and the further work required to enable national implementation.

Methodology

Trial findings were presented to NHS managers with a business case for an implementation pilot. Trial documentation was adapted for use in usual care using the COM-B model for behaviour change and evidence-based approaches to increase the return of postal questionnaires. Trial sites were contacted to understand their capacity to implement the intervention locally.

Results

The STAR care pathway was successfully implemented into NHS practice with a screening response rate of 83%. It is now permanently part of usual care at North Bristol NHS Trust. Trial centres indicated that lack of availability of STAR trained ESPs as a barrier to implementation. The trial manual and training session were adapted for online delivery in partnership with Health Education England.

Conclusion

The STAR care pathway has been successfully embedded into NHS care. A toolkit and online clinician training package enables national implementation.