Morbid Obesity: Increased Risk of Failure After Aseptic Revision TKA

Apr 8, 2015Clinical orthopaedics and related research

Higher Risk of Failure After Infection-Free Knee Replacement Surgery in People with Severe Obesity

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Abstract

Patients with morbid obesity (BMI≥40 kg/m2) have a 3.8 times higher risk of repeat revision after an index revision total knee arthroplasty compared to those without obesity (BMI<30 kg/m2).

  • Morbid obesity is associated with an increased risk of repeat revision (hazard ratio 3.8), reoperation (hazard ratio 2.9), and periprosthetic joint infection (hazard ratio 6.4) following revision total knee arthroplasty.
  • Implant survival rates at 5 years were 96% for patients with morbid obesity compared to 100% for those without, and at 10 years, they were 81% versus 93%, respectively.
  • Patients without obesity achieved higher Knee Society pain scores (90 vs 76) and function scores (61 vs 57) at 10 years compared to patients with morbid obesity.

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