| Literature DB >> 30539374 |
Yvonne van Zaanen1, Rutger C I van Geenen2, Thijs M J Pahlplatz3, Arthur J Kievit3, Marco J M Hoozemans4,5, Eric W P Bakker6, Leendert Blankevoort3, Matthias U Schafroth3, Daniel Haverkamp7, Ton M J S Vervest8, Dirk H P W Das9, Walter van der Weegen9, Vanessa A Scholtes10, Monique H W Frings-Dresen11, P Paul F M Kuijer11.
Abstract
Purpose Three out of ten patients do not return to work after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Patient expectations are suggested to play a key role. What are patients' expectations regarding the ability to perform work-related knee-demanding activities 6 months after TKA compared to their preoperative status? Methods A multi-center cross-sectional study was performed among 292 working patients listed for TKA. The Work Osteoarthritis or joint-Replacement Questionnaire (WORQ, range 0-100, minimal important difference 13) was used to assess the preoperatively experienced and expected ability to perform work-related knee-demanding activities 6 months postoperatively. Differences between the preoperative and expected WORQ scores were tested and the most difficult knee-demanding work-related activities were described. Results Two hundred thirty-six working patients (81%) completed the questionnaire. Patients' expected WORQ score (Median = 75, IQR 60-86) was significantly (p < 0.01) higher than their preoperative WORQ score (Median = 44, IQR 35-56). A clinical improvement in ability to perform work-related knee-demanding activities was expected by 72% of the patients, while 28% of the patients expected no clinical improvement or even worse ability to perform work-related knee-demanding activities 6 months after TKA. Of the patients, 34% expected severe difficulty in kneeling, 30% in crouching and 17% in clambering 6 months after TKA. Conclusions Most patients have high expectations, especially regarding activities involving deep knee flexion. Remarkably, three out of ten patients expect no clinical improvement or even a worse ability to perform work-related knee-demanding activities 6 months postoperatively compared to their preoperative status. Therefore, addressing patients expectations seems useful in order to assure realistic expectations regarding work activities.Entities:
Keywords: Knee arthroplasty, total; Patient expectations; Treatment outcome; Vocational rehabilitation; Work ability
Year: 2019 PMID: 30539374 PMCID: PMC6675779 DOI: 10.1007/s10926-018-9823-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Occup Rehabil ISSN: 1053-0487
Fig. 1Flow chart of patient inclusion
Preoperative characteristics of working patients < 65 years undergoing TKA
| Variable | Mean (SD), median [IQR] or cases (percentage) | Knee-demanding job | No knee-demanding job | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | Years | 59 [54–62] | 58 [53–61]a | 60 [56–62]a |
| Sex | Male | 104 (44%) | 45 (38%) | 59 (50%) |
| Female | 132 (56%) | 73 (62%) | 59 (50%) | |
| Educational level | Lower vocational/general | 51 (21%) | 31 (26%) | 20 (17%) |
| Intermediate vocational/intermediate and higher general | 128 (55%) | 60 (51%) | 68 (58%) | |
| Higher vocational/university | 56 (24%) | 26 (22%) | 30 (25%) | |
| BMI | Body mass/body height2 (kg/m2) | 29 [26–33] | 29 [26–32] | 29 [26–33] |
| Comorbidity | No other impairing disease | 187 (80%) | 93 (79%) | 94 (80%) |
| One other impairing disease | 34 (14%) | 15 (13%) | 19 (16%) | |
| More than one other impairing disease | 14 (6%) | 9 (8%) | 5 (4%) | |
| KOOS symptoms | 0–100 | 43 [32–57] | 43 [32–54] | 43 [36–61] |
| KOOS pain | 0-100 | 38 (17) | 36 [21–47]a | 42 [28–53]a |
| KOOS Quality of Life | 0–100 | 25 [13–38] | 19 [13–34] | 25 [13–38] |
| Time before operation | < 4 weeks | 134 (57%) | 69 (59%) | 65 (55%) |
| 4–8 weeks | 33 (14%) | 15 (13%) | 18 (15%) | |
| 8–12 weeks | 19 (8%) | 11 (9%) | 8 (7%) | |
| > 12 weeks | 24 (10%) | 13 (11%) | 11 (9%) | |
| Date of operation unknown | 26 (11%) | 10 (9%) | 16 (14%) | |
| Desire to return to current job | Yes | 224 (95%) | 112 (95%) | 112 (95%) |
| No | 12 (5%) | 6 (5%) | 6 (5%) | |
On KOOS symptoms and KOOS pain two answers were missing, on educational level, BMI, comorbidity and KOOS Quality of Life one answer was missing (both < 1%). Due to integers not all percentages count up to 100
KOOS Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score
aVariable with a significant difference ≤ 0.05 between knee-demanding and no knee-demanding job, Fisher–Freeman–Halton exact test for categorical variables, Mann Whitney U test for continuous variables
Fig. 2Boxplots of the experienced preoperative and the expected 6-months postoperative difficulties in ability to perform work-related knee-demanding activities measured by the WORQ (N = 236)
WORQ score, Expected WORQ score and differences in expected scores among all working TKA patients and among TKA patients with and without a knee-demanding job
| Variable | Working TKA patients | Knee-demanding joba | No knee-demanding job | Difference between the groups of knee-demanding and no knee-demanding job |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WORQ score | 44 [IQR 35–56] | 42 [IQR 33–54] | 44 [IQR 37–56] | n.s. |
| Expected WORQ score | 75 [IQR 60–85] | 75 [IQR 59–85] | 77 [IQR 60–87] | n.s. |
| Expected difference (WORQ-Expected WORQ) | 29 [IQR 10–44] | 29 [IQR 10–43] | 33 [IQR 11–44] | n.s. |
| Expected WORQ score ≤ 50 (unsatisfied) | 41 (17%) | 23 (20%) | 18 (15%) | n.s. |
| WORQ score ≥ 71 (satisfied) | 143 (61%) | 71 (60%) | 72 (61%) | n.s. |
| MID (> 13 point) | 171 (73%) | 86 (73%) | 85 (72%) | n.s. |
WORQ Work Osteoarthritis or joint-Replacement Questionnaire
aThe job was classified as knee demanding if the patient reported to perform ‘often’ or ‘always’ on one or more of the following five activities: crouching, kneeling, clambering, taking the stairs or lifting. No statistical differences (p > 0.05, n.s.) were found between knee-demanding and no knee-demanding job by Mann–Whitney U test for continuous variables, Pearson Chi-square test for dichotomous variables
Fig. 3The percentage (%) of patients experiencing severe difficulty in their ability to perform work-related knee-demanding activities preoperatively and the percentage (%) of patients expecting severe difficulty 6 months postoperatively