Robert Barrack: โItโs rare for us to see a revision knee from the community that failed in 12-15 months, but itโs the norm for MIS knees.โ Adolph Lombardi: โBut Robert, if your community has a number of surgeons who are attempting MIS, youโre going to see more failures.โ
This weekโs Orthopaedic Crossfireยฎ debate is โMIS: A Risk Factor for Early TKA Failure.โ For the proposition was Robert L. Barrack, M.D. from Washington University Medical School in St. Louis. Against the proposition was Adolph V. Lombardi, Jr., M.D. of the Mt. Carmel New Albany Surgical Hospital in Ohio; moderating was Steven J. MacDonald, M.D., F.R.C.S.(C) of the University of Western Ontario.
Dr. Barrack: โThere is some support in the literature for short term benefit to an MIS TKA [minimally invasive surgery total knee arthroplasty]. The data is pretty soft and is for 6-12 weeks. There are a lot of problems with these studies, however. These are all done by designers and proponents of the system utilized; theyโre prone to selection and observer bias. These are very experienced, high volume surgeons, and may not be representative of the results that most surgeons with less experience and lower volume can expect. There is little or no literature on MIS total knees performed by community surgeons.โ
โWe did a study looking at all revision total knees at three referral centers that do revisions from community surgeons. These are first time revisionsโnot infections or re-revisions. In an MIS kneeโฆit looks cosmetically excellent. The incision is only about 10cm; the definition in the literature is generally <14cmโฆours were between 10 and 12cm. And the proximal extent of the incision was within 1cm of the proximal portion of the patella. We had 236 first time revisions; about 80% had been done through a standard approach. In this time period we had done 44 revisions of MIS knees. So we compared the MIS revisions to those done through a standard approachโฆby gender, diagnosis, time to revision, and reason for revision.โ
โWe found: MIS patients were younger, there were more females and large femalesโฆand the time to revision was shocking. Less than 15 months to revision for the average MIS knee compared to about seven years to revision of a component placed through a standard incision. MIS failures were much more likely to occur in the first year; more than 80% occurred within two years. They were much more likely to fail through malrotation or instability. Yet, they were much less likely to have lysis or wear as a cause of failure.โ
โExamples: One knee surgery was done by a surgeon who took three hours, so he bailed out to a standard incision in the other knee and did it in half the time. The right knee was painful, with tibia loosening at a year. In another case of patellar instability, the femur and tibia were malrotatedโฆrequiring revision at eight months.โ
โThese are the โcatastrophicโ failures that were revised within 1-2 years. What are the mid- and long-term results of those that do stay in place? MIS procedures magnify the common errors of total knee replacement. In one case, a varus knee in a large female with limited motion, the patient had a standard knee on the opposite side and had more motion and better clinical results. Her postoperative course was somewhat better in the standard knee side than the MIS side.โ
โThe downside of the MIS knees: higher complication rate, more outliers (even among the experts). There has been a published result of a prospective, randomized study of MIS versus standard among proponents of MIS knees and at 12 weeks they found no difference, although the MIS knees did have a significant number of delayed wound healing. Their conclusion was that there was no improvement over a standard approach.โ
โThe title of this debate is NOT: โthe complication rate of MIS is invariably higherโ or โMIS is a bad, bad thing.โ The question is, โIs MIS a risk factor for early failure of TKA?โ I would say, based on the high number of early revisions that weโre seeing and our published results, the answer is โyes.โโ
Dr. Lombardi: โMIS: itโs not a risk factor for early failure. A patient came to see me last week, and was obviously not an MIS patientโฆonly eight months postop. There was radiolucency on the medial tibial plateau; a range of flexion of about 60 degrees. Another patient with a long incisionโฆand again, a painful, malaligned knee. Technique trumps incision length.โ
โMy data: From 1994-96 with a standard medial parapatellar approach in 1, 291 knees. Weโll compare that to a limited incision done by two of usโKeith Berend and myselfโand 3, 631 knees. The male/female distribution was quite similar. We did more CRs [cruciate retaining] in the MIS group than in the standard group, but less patients required manipulation in the limited incision groupโฆand there were less reoperations in the limited incision group.โ
โMIS is also โMultidisciplinary Interactive System.โ Itโs the 10 steps you need to pull the whole operation together. Do a good orthopedic assessment, a good history and physical, align patient expectations with your expectations, and motivate your patient. Also, have a good preoperative clearance, so when the patient hits the OR theyโre going to be a candidate for surgery that day. And we know that preoperative rehabilitation can decrease length of stay and anxiety. If we educate our patients better they will come through surgery quicker with less pain, less anxiety, decreased length of stay, and increased satisfaction.โ
โWeโve also understood from the MIS movement how to handle pain betterโฆand we need to treat it on a multifactorial basisโฆepidurals/spinals/regional blocks/local anesthetic; we need to use anti-inflammatories preop and perioperatively, and get them started on a long-acting Oxycontin or another medication.โ
โYou need a very responsive anesthesia team to get a good spinal if thatโs what you preferโor a femoral nerve block. We donโt like a femoral nerve block, however, because that means we canโt get the patient up without a knee immobilizer. We have a multimodal prophylactic antimetics system consisting of Decadron, Zofran, and a Scopolamine patch.โ
โThe operative intervention is critical. If youโre going to approach this patient with a small incision, proceed with caution in these patients: muscular male, those with increased BMI [body mass index], osteopenia, patella baja, decreased ROM [range of motion], a significant flexion contracture or deformity, severe bone loss, thin skin (patient with RA [rheumatoid arthritis] or diabetes), and those patients who had an open reduction or an osteotomy of some type.โ
โUse an incision that you are familiar with. If youโve been doing a midvastus, make it smaller. If youโve been doing a medial parapatellar, maybe shrink that one down. We know thereโs literature to confirm that indeed these patients do better early on, probably because we donโt violate as much of the suprapatellar pouch.โ
โAnd weโre making sure we protect the key ligamentous structure during the whole operation. Weโre identifying the landmarks that we need to get good rotational control, and I think this has been helped by instrumentation that has been streamlined by all the manufacturers to help us make smaller incisions and get the products in correctly. Also, you can combine this with navigation.โ
โOr you can use an MRI-generated total knee where we make an actual mold of the patientโs anatomy to give you a jig to put on the patient. You can do this through a smaller incision and appropriately align the parts.โ
โWe are aggressive with pain managementโฆand patients are out of bed within hours of the operationโfull weight bearing. Our average length of stay in 1997โฆ3.9 days for traditional; as we incorporated rapid recovery it went down to 2.8 days in 2003. As we progressed with a standard incision and the rapid recovery, it was 2.7 days; as we added smaller incisions we got down to 2.2 days.โ
โThe reality of MIS is that itโs multifactorial. My take home message is: MIS is here to stay.โ
Moderator MacDonald: โRobert, what would it take in terms of a prospective, randomized clinical trial to sway youโฆor do you think itโs more complicated than that?โ
Dr. Barrack: โItโs not that MIS is badโI do MIS on most of my knees. Itโs rare for us to see a revision knee from the community that failed in 12-15 months, but itโs the norm for the MIS knees. The question for the audience is, โWhat applies to their practice?โโ
Dr. Lombardi: โBut Robert, if your community has a number of surgeons who are attempting MIS, youโre going to see more failures. In our community we still have a large number of surgeons doing longer incisions. Hence, my patients who come in have long incisions and have the same types of problems youโre talking about with MIS.โ
Dr. Barrack: โAre you seeing failures in 12-15 months?โ
Dr. Lombardi: โBoth of those patients were 8 to 9 months postop.โ
Dr. Barrack: โWe looked at all of our revisions over several years and itโs relatively rare to see a revision in a year or two. And I donโt think MIS is being done on that large a scaleโand this was an experience at three centers, so Iโm concerned that there is a high risk. Youโre not going to get as good fixation, exposure, and ligament balance early on without more work, so you have to be more selective.โ
Moderator MacDonald: โAdolph, the ideal indication in your practice would be the thin, non-osteopenic womanโjust kidding.โ
Dr. Lombardi: โThat is where you should startโฆthin female, maybe with a valgus knee, where the patella subluxes very easily. Once you accomplish that you move on into more difficult cases.โ
Moderator MacDonald: โRobert, what do you tell a patient who is pushing MIS?โ
Dr. Barrack: โThree-fourths of the time I do it, but if I have a 300lb patient or someone with too much deformity I tell them that it may not be the best thing for them.โ
Dr. Lombardi: โI encounter that all the time.โ
Dr. Barrack: โI take a pen and put a dot at the top of their kneecap and below the joint line and say, โthatโs the minimum.โ A lot of patients are shocked and think weโre doing an arthroscopic procedure.โ
Moderator MacDonald: โAdolph, how much benefit have you seen from the multimodal approach versus from a smaller incision?โ
Dr. Lombardi: โWeโre getting patients out faster with a shorter incision; and you canโt determine the psychological perspective of the patient. When they see a small incision, closed, subcuticular with wound glue, theyโre excited. So perhaps this has much to do with organizing a good team around you and doing the right thing with respect to managing pain.โ
Dr. Barrack: โWeโve seen equal, surprisingly good results through standard incisions if you use all those modalities. If you shrink your incision a little youโll probably get similar results.โ
Moderator MacDonald: โThank you.โ
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