Retrospective Cohort Study Comparing Complications, Readmission, Transfusion, and Length of Stay of Patients Undergoing Simultaneous and Staged Bilateral Total Hip Arthroplasty

Objectives To determine whether the rates of postoperative complications, rate of readmission, cumulative transfusion volume, and length of stay (LOS) differ between simultaneous total hip arthroplasty (THA) and staged bilateral THA and to assess whether the length of the interval between staged pro...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sheng‐jie Guo, Hong‐yi Shao, Yong Huang, De‐jin Yang, Han‐long Zheng, Yi‐xin Zhou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-02-01
Series:Orthopaedic Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/os.12617
id doaj-e4bdf67e785c470283e11007185ec050
record_format Article
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sheng‐jie Guo
Hong‐yi Shao
Yong Huang
De‐jin Yang
Han‐long Zheng
Yi‐xin Zhou
spellingShingle Sheng‐jie Guo
Hong‐yi Shao
Yong Huang
De‐jin Yang
Han‐long Zheng
Yi‐xin Zhou
Retrospective Cohort Study Comparing Complications, Readmission, Transfusion, and Length of Stay of Patients Undergoing Simultaneous and Staged Bilateral Total Hip Arthroplasty
Orthopaedic Surgery
Complication
Length of stay
Staged surgery
Simultaneous surgery
Total hip arthroplasty
author_facet Sheng‐jie Guo
Hong‐yi Shao
Yong Huang
De‐jin Yang
Han‐long Zheng
Yi‐xin Zhou
author_sort Sheng‐jie Guo
title Retrospective Cohort Study Comparing Complications, Readmission, Transfusion, and Length of Stay of Patients Undergoing Simultaneous and Staged Bilateral Total Hip Arthroplasty
title_short Retrospective Cohort Study Comparing Complications, Readmission, Transfusion, and Length of Stay of Patients Undergoing Simultaneous and Staged Bilateral Total Hip Arthroplasty
title_full Retrospective Cohort Study Comparing Complications, Readmission, Transfusion, and Length of Stay of Patients Undergoing Simultaneous and Staged Bilateral Total Hip Arthroplasty
title_fullStr Retrospective Cohort Study Comparing Complications, Readmission, Transfusion, and Length of Stay of Patients Undergoing Simultaneous and Staged Bilateral Total Hip Arthroplasty
title_full_unstemmed Retrospective Cohort Study Comparing Complications, Readmission, Transfusion, and Length of Stay of Patients Undergoing Simultaneous and Staged Bilateral Total Hip Arthroplasty
title_sort retrospective cohort study comparing complications, readmission, transfusion, and length of stay of patients undergoing simultaneous and staged bilateral total hip arthroplasty
publisher Wiley
series Orthopaedic Surgery
issn 1757-7853
1757-7861
publishDate 2020-02-01
description Objectives To determine whether the rates of postoperative complications, rate of readmission, cumulative transfusion volume, and length of stay (LOS) differ between simultaneous total hip arthroplasty (THA) and staged bilateral THA and to assess whether the length of the interval between staged procedures influences surgery outcome. Methods This was a retrospective cohort study comparing the rate of postoperative complications, readmission, cumulative transfusion volume, and LOS between simultaneous THA and staged bilateral THA in our hospital's registration database. The inclusion criteria is listed as follows: patients who underwent bilateral primary THA between January 2011 and January 2015 with minimum 3‐month follow‐up; simultaneous bilateral THA; staged bilateral THA; postoperative complications, readmission, cumulative transfusion volume, length of stay of the patients and the influence of the interval between stages of bilateral THA on the outcome above; and retrospective cohort study. Finally, a total of 1145 patients, including simultaneous bilateral THA in 863 patients (1726 hips) and staged bilateral THA in 282 patients (564 hips), were eligible for the present study. The patients were divided into three groups according to the interval time (≤30 days, 30–90 days, >90 days) between the two stages of bilateral THA and we compared postoperative complications, readmission rates, cumulative transfusion volume, and LOS for the three groups. All patients’ medical records and outpatient notes were reviewed to extract preoperative data, perioperative complications, readmission, cumulative transfusion, and LOS. Preoperative information included patients’ age, sex, diagnosis, body mass index, and American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) classification. Perioperative complications were sorted into two groups: (i) medical complications included cardiovascular, pulmonary, neurological, digestive, and urologic system complications, along with other miscellaneous issues; and (ii) surgical complications included dislocation, superficial wound infection, hematoma, deep periprosthetic joint infection, and nerve palsy. Patients who failed to come back to visit our hospital in the postoperative 3 months were followed up by telephone, at which point we inquired about any postoperative complications and readmission. Results Simultaneous THA was performed more often in younger men, and patients in the simultaneous group had fewer major medical complications (excluding venous thromboembolism), fewer surgical complications, and shorter hospital stays; however, patients in the simultaneous group were likelier to have a higher transfusion rate than patients in the staged group. Among patients in the staged group, there were no differences for differing time intervals, except that patients with a between‐stage interval of ≤30 days required more blood transfusions. Conclusion With careful patient assessment and selection, simultaneous bilateral THA is a safe procedure, and has lower rates of surgical and major medical complications than staged bilateral THA.
topic Complication
Length of stay
Staged surgery
Simultaneous surgery
Total hip arthroplasty
url https://doi.org/10.1111/os.12617
work_keys_str_mv AT shengjieguo retrospectivecohortstudycomparingcomplicationsreadmissiontransfusionandlengthofstayofpatientsundergoingsimultaneousandstagedbilateraltotalhiparthroplasty
AT hongyishao retrospectivecohortstudycomparingcomplicationsreadmissiontransfusionandlengthofstayofpatientsundergoingsimultaneousandstagedbilateraltotalhiparthroplasty
AT yonghuang retrospectivecohortstudycomparingcomplicationsreadmissiontransfusionandlengthofstayofpatientsundergoingsimultaneousandstagedbilateraltotalhiparthroplasty
AT dejinyang retrospectivecohortstudycomparingcomplicationsreadmissiontransfusionandlengthofstayofpatientsundergoingsimultaneousandstagedbilateraltotalhiparthroplasty
AT hanlongzheng retrospectivecohortstudycomparingcomplicationsreadmissiontransfusionandlengthofstayofpatientsundergoingsimultaneousandstagedbilateraltotalhiparthroplasty
AT yixinzhou retrospectivecohortstudycomparingcomplicationsreadmissiontransfusionandlengthofstayofpatientsundergoingsimultaneousandstagedbilateraltotalhiparthroplasty
_version_ 1724280230504300544
spelling doaj-e4bdf67e785c470283e11007185ec0502021-02-08T09:50:53ZengWileyOrthopaedic Surgery1757-78531757-78612020-02-0112123324010.1111/os.12617Retrospective Cohort Study Comparing Complications, Readmission, Transfusion, and Length of Stay of Patients Undergoing Simultaneous and Staged Bilateral Total Hip ArthroplastySheng‐jie Guo0Hong‐yi Shao1Yong Huang2De‐jin Yang3Han‐long Zheng4Yi‐xin Zhou5Department of Adult Reconstructive Surgery, Beijing Jishuitan Hospital Fourth Clinical College of Peking University, Jishuitan Orthopaedic College of Tsinghua University Beijing ChinaDepartment of Adult Reconstructive Surgery, Beijing Jishuitan Hospital Fourth Clinical College of Peking University, Jishuitan Orthopaedic College of Tsinghua University Beijing ChinaDepartment of Adult Reconstructive Surgery, Beijing Jishuitan Hospital Fourth Clinical College of Peking University, Jishuitan Orthopaedic College of Tsinghua University Beijing ChinaDepartment of Adult Reconstructive Surgery, Beijing Jishuitan Hospital Fourth Clinical College of Peking University, Jishuitan Orthopaedic College of Tsinghua University Beijing ChinaDepartment of Adult Reconstructive Surgery, Beijing Jishuitan Hospital Fourth Clinical College of Peking University, Jishuitan Orthopaedic College of Tsinghua University Beijing ChinaDepartment of Adult Reconstructive Surgery, Beijing Jishuitan Hospital Fourth Clinical College of Peking University, Jishuitan Orthopaedic College of Tsinghua University Beijing ChinaObjectives To determine whether the rates of postoperative complications, rate of readmission, cumulative transfusion volume, and length of stay (LOS) differ between simultaneous total hip arthroplasty (THA) and staged bilateral THA and to assess whether the length of the interval between staged procedures influences surgery outcome. Methods This was a retrospective cohort study comparing the rate of postoperative complications, readmission, cumulative transfusion volume, and LOS between simultaneous THA and staged bilateral THA in our hospital's registration database. The inclusion criteria is listed as follows: patients who underwent bilateral primary THA between January 2011 and January 2015 with minimum 3‐month follow‐up; simultaneous bilateral THA; staged bilateral THA; postoperative complications, readmission, cumulative transfusion volume, length of stay of the patients and the influence of the interval between stages of bilateral THA on the outcome above; and retrospective cohort study. Finally, a total of 1145 patients, including simultaneous bilateral THA in 863 patients (1726 hips) and staged bilateral THA in 282 patients (564 hips), were eligible for the present study. The patients were divided into three groups according to the interval time (≤30 days, 30–90 days, >90 days) between the two stages of bilateral THA and we compared postoperative complications, readmission rates, cumulative transfusion volume, and LOS for the three groups. All patients’ medical records and outpatient notes were reviewed to extract preoperative data, perioperative complications, readmission, cumulative transfusion, and LOS. Preoperative information included patients’ age, sex, diagnosis, body mass index, and American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) classification. Perioperative complications were sorted into two groups: (i) medical complications included cardiovascular, pulmonary, neurological, digestive, and urologic system complications, along with other miscellaneous issues; and (ii) surgical complications included dislocation, superficial wound infection, hematoma, deep periprosthetic joint infection, and nerve palsy. Patients who failed to come back to visit our hospital in the postoperative 3 months were followed up by telephone, at which point we inquired about any postoperative complications and readmission. Results Simultaneous THA was performed more often in younger men, and patients in the simultaneous group had fewer major medical complications (excluding venous thromboembolism), fewer surgical complications, and shorter hospital stays; however, patients in the simultaneous group were likelier to have a higher transfusion rate than patients in the staged group. Among patients in the staged group, there were no differences for differing time intervals, except that patients with a between‐stage interval of ≤30 days required more blood transfusions. Conclusion With careful patient assessment and selection, simultaneous bilateral THA is a safe procedure, and has lower rates of surgical and major medical complications than staged bilateral THA.https://doi.org/10.1111/os.12617ComplicationLength of stayStaged surgerySimultaneous surgeryTotal hip arthroplasty