Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy July 2019, Volume 27, Issue 7, pp 2259–2265

Obesity should not be considered a contraindication to medial Oxford UKA: long-term patient-reported outcomes and implant survival in 1000 knees

Molloy, J., Kennedy, J., Jenkins, C. et al.
Knee

Purpose

Some health providers ration knee arthroplasty on the basis of body mass index (BMI). There is no long-term data on the outcome of medial mobile-bearing unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) in different BMI groups. This study aimed to determine the effect of patient body mass index (BMI) on patient-reported outcomes and long-term survival of medial UKA in a large non-registry cohort. Our hypothesis is that increasing BMI would be associated with worse outcomes.

 

Methods

Data were analysed from a prospective cohort of 1000 consecutive medial mobile-bearing Oxford UKA with mean 10-year follow-up. Patients were grouped: BMI < 25, BMI 25 to < 30, BMI 30 to < 35 and BMI 35+. Oxford Knee Score (OKS) and Tegner Activity Score were assessed at 1, 5 and 10 years. Kaplan–Meier survivorship was calculated and compared between BMI groups.

 

Results

All groups had significant improvement in OKS and Tegner scores. BMI 35 + kg/m2 experienced the greatest overall increase in mean OKS of 17.3 points (p = 0.02). There was no significant difference in ten-year survival, which was, from lowest BMI group to highest 92%, 95%, 94% and 93%.

Conclusion

There was no difference in implant survival between groups, and although there was no consistent trend in postoperative OKS, the BMI 35+ group benefited the most from UKA. Therefore, when UKA is used for appropriate indications, high BMI should not be considered to be a contraindication. Furthermore rationing based on BMI seems unjustified, particularly when the commonest threshold (BMI 35) is used.

 

Level of evidence

III.


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