Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2021 Jan 12 : 1–5.

Prioritising of hip and knee arthroplasty procedures during the COVID-19 pandemic: the European Hip Society and the European Knee Associates Survey of Members

Martin Thaler,1 Nanne Kort,2 Luigi Zagra,3 Michael T. Hirschmann,4 Ismail Khosravi,corresponding author1 Michael Liebensteiner,1 Theofilos Karachalios,5 and Reha N. Tandogan6
Hip Knee

Purpose

During the COVID-19 pandemic there has been a massive reduction of arthroplasty services due to reallocation of hospital resources. The unique challenge for clinicians has been to define which arthroplasty patients most urgently require surgery. The present study aimed to investigate priority arthroplasty procedures during the pandemic and in the reinstatement period from the surgeon’s perspective.

Material and methods

An online survey was conducted among members of the European Hip Society (EHS), European Knee Associates (EKA) and other invited orthopaedic arthroplasty surgeons (experts) from across the world. The survey consisted of 17 different arthroplasty procedures/indications of which participants were asked to choose and rank the most important 10.

Results

Four hundred and thirty-nine arthroplasty surgeons from 44 countries responded. The EHS and EKA had a 43% response rate of members. In weighted average points, the majority of respondents (67.5 points) ranked ‘acute fractures requiring arthroplasty (Periprosthetic fractures, THA/hemi-arthroplasty for femoral neck fractures)’ as priority indication number one, followed by ‘first-stage explantations for acute PJI (periprosthetic joint infection)’ in second place and priority indication (45.9 points) three as ‘one-stage revision for acute PJI’ (39.7 points).

Conclusions

There was agreement that femoral neck fractures, periprosthetic fractures, and acute infections should be prioritised and cannot be postponed in the setting of the COVID-19 pandemic. As arthroplasty procedures are being resumed in most countries now, there has also been a relaxation of lockdown rules in most countries, which might cause a so-called second wave of the pandemic. Therefore, the results of the current study present a proposal by experts as to which operations should be prioritised in the setting of a second wave of the pandemic.


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