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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_5 | Pages 95 - 95
1 Apr 2018
Bogue E Twiggs J Wakelin E Miles B Liu D
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Introduction

Provision of prehabilitation prior to total knee arthroplasty (TKA) through a digital mobile application is a novel concept. The primary aim of our research is to determine whether provision of prehabilitation through a mobile digital application impacts length of stay (LOS), requirement for inpatient rehabilitation and hospital-associated costs after TKA. Our study hypothesis is that a mobile digital application provides a low resource, cost effective method of delivering prehabilitation prior to TKA.

Methods

An observational, retrospective analysis was performed on a consecutive case series of 64 patients who underwent TKA by a single surgeon over a 21-month period. Pre operative Knee Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) were collected on all patients. The first group of patients (control) did not undergo prehabilitation, the subsequent group of patients (experimental) were offered prehabilitation through a mobile application called PhysiTrack. The experimental group were provided with progressive quadriceps and hamstring strengthening exercises, and calf and hamstring stretches. Exercises were automatically progressed after 2 weeks unless the patient requested otherwise or a physiotherapist clinically intervened. The non-compliance rate was 33% (n=11), after removing these patients from the analysis, 22 patients remained and these were age matched to 22 patients from the control group. Aside from the access to prehabilitation, all patients underwent TKA using identical surgical technique and peri-operative care regime. Length of stay data for inpatient care and rehabilitation were captured for all patients. Cost was calculated using the inpatient and rehabilitation costs provided by the hospital.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_5 | Pages 96 - 96
1 Apr 2018
Bogue E Solomon M Wakelin E Miles B Twiggs J
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Introduction

Dissatisfaction rates after TKA are reported to be between 15 – 25%, with unmet outcome expectations being a key contributor. Shared decision making tools (SDMT) are designed to align a patient's and surgeon's expectations. This study demonstrates clinical validation of a patient specific shared decision making tool.

Methods

Patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) were collected in 150 patients in a pre-consultation environment of one surgeon. The data was processed into a probabilistic predictive model utilising prior data to generate a preoperative baseline and an expected outcome after TKA. The surgeon was blinded to the prediction algorithm for the first 75 patients and exposed for the following 75 patients. PROMs collected were the knee injury and osteoarthritis outcome score (KOOS) and questions on lower back pain, hip pain and falls. The patients booked and not booked before and after exposure to the prediction were collected.

The clinical validation involved 27 patients who had their outcome predicted and had their PROMs captured at 12 months after TKA. The predicted change in severity of pain and the patients actual change from pre-op to 12 month post operative KOOS pain was analysed using a Spearman's Rho correlation. Further analysis was performed by dividing the group into those predicted by the model to have improved by more than 10 percentile points and those who were predicted to improve by less than 10 percentile points.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_20 | Pages 61 - 61
1 Dec 2017
Bogue E Twiggs J Liu D
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Provision of prehabilitation prior to total knee arthroplasty (TKA) through a digital mobile application is a novel concept. Our research evaluates a resource effective and cost effective method of delivering prehabilitation. The primary aim of our research is to determine whether provision of prehabilitation through a mobile digital application impacts inpatient LOS after TKA. The secondary objective is to understand the effect of digital prehabilitation on hospital costs.

An observational, retrospective analysis was performed on a consecutive case series of 64 patients who underwent TKA by a single surgeon over a 21 month period. Exercise provision varied from 3 months to 2 weeks prior to TKA. The outcomes of rehabilitation length of stay, total length of stay and total hospital costs were statistically significantly at p=0.5. The rehabilitation length of stay was 3.79 days in the experimental and 7.33 days in the control group (p = 0.045), the total length of stay was 12.00 days in the control and 8.04 days in the experimental group (p=0.03) and the total cost of the hospital stay was $6357.35AUD for the control and $4343.22AUD for the experimental group (p=0.029).

Our research shows a cost saving with this intervention, as measured by a reduction in rehabilitation length of stay. To our knowledge, this is the first piece of research that analyses the impact of the use of a digital mobile application providing prehabilitation prior to TKA.