| Literature DB >> 35774880 |
Aditya V Maheshwari1, Christopher T Garnett1, Tzu H Cheng1,2, Joshua R Buksbaum1, Vivek Singh1,3, Neil V Shah1.
Abstract
Background: Although several studies have indirectly compared teaching and nonteaching hospitals, results are conflicting, and evaluation of the direct impact of trainee involvement is lacking. We investigated the direct impact of resident participation in primary total knee arthroplasties (TKAs). Material and methods: Fifty patients undergoing single-staged sequential bilateral primary TKAs were evaluated. The more symptomatic side was performed by the attending surgeon first, followed by the contralateral side performed by a chief resident under direct supervision and assistance of the same attending surgeon. Surgery was subdivided into 8 critical steps on both sides. The overall time and critical stepwise surgical time and short-term clinical outcomes were then compared between the 2 sides.Entities:
Keywords: Orthopaedic surgery; Postoperative outcomes; Residency training; Resident education; Single-staged bilateral; Total knee arthroplasty
Year: 2022 PMID: 35774880 PMCID: PMC9237261 DOI: 10.1016/j.artd.2022.02.029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arthroplast Today ISSN: 2352-3441
The 8 critical steps for the total knee arthroplasty procedure along with the intraoperative comparative timing data for the attending and the resident.
| Step number | Step name and definition | Attending mean ± SD (range) | Resident mean ± SD (range) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Exposure (skin incision to placement of tibial jig) | 9.5 ± 1.9 (7 to 15) | 16.5 ± 4.2 (9 to 27) | |
| 2 | Tibial jig placement and tibial cuts to the distal femur cut and extension balancing (including soft-tissue balancing in extension) | 9.8 ± 3.4 (5 to 20) | 13.2 ± 3.7 (7 to 21) | |
| 3 | Extension balancing to the preparation of femur and femoral trial placement | 12.0 ± 3.7 (8 to 27) | 14.4 ± 3.1 (9 to 20) | |
| 4 | Femoral trial placement to the preparation and placement of tibial trial | 3.7 ± 1.9 (1 to 12) | 4.3 ± 2.5 (2 to 15) | .287 |
| 5 | Tibial trial placement to the preparation and placement of patellar trial with evaluation of patellar tracking | 3.3 ± 0.9 (2 to 6) | 4.2 ± 1.2 (2 to 8) | |
| 6 | Patellar trialing to the start of mixing of cement | 2.6 ± 1.7 (1 to 10) | 2.7 ± 1.3 (1 to 6) | .776 |
| 7 | Cement mixing to the placement of final polyethylene insert (including removal of excessive cement after curing) | 16.1 ± 3.5 (5 to 24) | 16.7 ± 3.9 (6 to 24) | .447 |
| 8 | Closure (final insert placement to skin closure and dressing application) | 13.2 ± 2.3 (10 to 18) | 24.9 ± 4.9 (14 to 32) | |
| Total time (min) | 70.2 ± 12.0 (52 to 108) | 96.9 ± 14.7 (68 to 132) | ||
| EBL (mL) | 228.1 ± 62.8 (100 to 400) | 293.8 ± 54.1 (100 to 350) | ||
| Tourniquet | 8.2 ± 1.2 (7 to 10) | 7.8 ± 0.9 (7 to 10) | .259 | |
EBL, estimated blood loss.
The freehand preparation of the patella and subsequent cementing of the final components until the insertion of the final polyethylene insert (steps 5-7a) were exclusively performed by the attending surgeon bilaterally as they were deemed the most critical steps for the procedure. A mean of 5.9 mins (range, 4-10 mins) were required between placement of the dressing on the first side and incision on the second side.
Bold values indicate statistical significance, P < .05.
Tourniquet was used bilaterally only on first 39 patients and was inflated only for cementing part. The remaining cases were done without tourniquet as change in surgeon’s preference.
Demographics of included patients undergoing total knee arthroplasties.
| Parameter | Mean ± SD (range) |
|---|---|
| Age (y) | 65.5 ± 1.4 (49-78) |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 31.7 ± 1.6 (20.9-43.8) |
| Gender | |
| Male | 11 (22.0%) |
| Female | 39 (78.0%) |
| Diagnosis | |
| Primary osteoarthritis | 46 (92.0%) |
| Inflammatory arthritis | 4 (8.0%) |
| Deformity | |
| Bilateral varus | 41 (82.0%) |
| Bilateral valgus | 5 (10.0%) |
| Windswept | 4 (8.0%) |
| Baseline preoperative Knee Society Score (KSS) | |
| Attending side | 25.1 |
| Resident side | 29.2 ( |
| ASA grade | |
| 1 | 1 (2.0%) |
| 2 | 36 (72.0%) |
| 3 | 13 (26.0%) |
| Anesthesia type | |
| Regional/Combined spinal-epidural | 44 (88.0%) |
| General | 6 (12.0%) |
| Implant used | |
| PFC Sigma PS, cemented (DePuy Synthes, Warsaw, IN) | 29 (58.0%) |
| ATTUNE PS, cemented (DePuy Synthes, Warsaw, IN) | 19 (38.0%) |
| Triathlon, cementless (Stryker Corporation, Mahwah, NJ) | 1 (2.0%) |
| Zimmer Persona, cementless (ZimmerBiomet, Warsaw, IN) | 1 (2.0%) |
ASA, American Society of Anesthesiologists; BMI, body mass index.
Two were rotating platform.
Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) experience of the orthopaedic residents at our institute.a
| Number | Chief residents involved in this study (n = 27) | All chief residents that graduated from the program during the study period |
|---|---|---|
| Total Number | 30 | 35 |
| Mean TKA numbers as junior residents (PGY1-4) | 101 (68-145) | 96 (56-145) |
| Mean TKA numbers as chief residents (PGY 5) | 29 (17-41) | 26 (14-41) |
| Mean TKA numbers in entire residency (PGY1-5) | 128 (87-180) | 122 (78-180) |
| Mean months as PGY5 before their index study case | 6 (1-11) | N/A |
| Mean TKA cases as a PGY5 before the index study case | 19 (1-27) | N/A |
PGY, postgraduate year.
Mean numbers for national resident performance obtained from the ACGME [48]. During their entire residency (60 mo), all residents rotated with the same attending surgeon (A.V.M.) for 8 mo (4 as a junior resident [PGY-1 and PGY-3] and 4 as a chief resident [PGY-5] in 4 different 2-month slots). This study was conducted during their third slot, and thus all residents have had some prior experience with the procedure and the attending surgeon’s technique. A total of 30 chief residents participated in this study, and 11 of them were involved with multiple cases (1 case, n = 18; 2 cases, n = 7; 3 cases, n = 3; 4 cases, n = 1; 5 cases, n = 1). The graduating residents, as well as residents included in this study, had comparable primary TKA experience to residents nationally [48] during the study period (P > .842). A total of 5 (16.7%) chief residents matched into adult reconstruction fellowship prior to their study participation period. In comparison, the attending surgeon had performed 64 primary TKAs before the index study case and additional 891 (127 per year) during the study period.
National Resident Average of TKAs performed, 2013-2019: 117.1 ± 9.1.
Complications in the study patients.
| Complication | Number (n) | In-hospital vs after discharge | Outcome | Laterality (attending vs resident) | Readmission | Return to operating room |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aspiration pneumonitis after general anesthesia | 1 | In-hospital | Treated with initiation of antibiotics, pulmonary hygiene, and incentive spirometry, resolved uneventfully. | NA | No | No |
| Isolated peroneal deep vein thrombosis (DVT) | 1 | In-hospital | The patient was maintained on aspirin [ | Resident | No | No |
| Mortality | 1 | After discharge | The patient was reported as deceased at 6 wks postoperatively at another hospital emergency room after an initial uneventful course. This patient had a BMI of 30 kg/m2, with hypertension, and was still on aspirin for venous thromboembolism prophylaxis. No postmortem analysis or PE studies were performed, but a cardiopulmonary cause was suspected per emergency room notes. | NA | Patient returned to emergency room of another hospital | No |
| Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) | 1 | Both in-hospital and after discharge | Being treated conservatively by pain management, still active. | Both sides | No | No |
| Patellar clunk | 1 | After discharge at 1 y | Surgical excision at 15 mo, resolved uneventfully | Attending | Ambulatory surgery | Yes |
| Stiffness | 2 | After discharge | Manipulation under anesthesia: 1 patient × 3 mo; second patient × 6 wks | Both sides | Ambulatory surgery | Yes |
BMI, body mass index; NA, not applicable; PE, pulmonary embolism.
This patient also had a suture granuloma on the attending side along with stiffness bilaterally. Thus, she was returned to the operating room at 6 wks for excision of suture granuloma with primary closure and manipulation under anesthesia relatively earlier than usual.
Summary of published literature on the impact of resident involvement in orthopedic procedures.
| Study | Study design | Procedure | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Farnworth et al. 2001 [ | Retrospective Cohort Institutional Data | Arthroscopic ACL reconstruction | Anesthesia time, case time, and costs, were significantly higher in cases with resident involvement than with resident absence |
| Silber et al. 2009 [ | Retrospective review Medicare Claims Data | Lumbar/lumbosacral or cervical fusions Revision of hip or knee replacement Spinal canal exploration Excision of intervertebral disc Primary THA/TKA Hip hemiarthroplasty ORIF humerus/tibia/femur/radius/ulna Shoulder arthroplasty Rotator cuff repair Femur internal fixation Closed reduction-internal fixation femur/radius/ulna Femoral implant device removal Toe amputation | Survival was higher at teaching hospitals as a result of lower mortality, despite lengthier operative times |
| Schoenfeld et al. 2013 [ | Retrospective Cohort ACS NSQIP | Primary THA/TKA Lumbar discectomy Anterior cervical arthrodesis Below/above knee amputation Anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction High tibial osteotomy Distal biceps tenodesis Major peripheral nerve neuroplasty Flexor tendon repair Extensor tendon repair | Significant association between resident involvement and the risk of developing ≥1 postoperative or major systemic complications in patients undergoing primary TKA and THA but not with other orthopedic procedures |
| Pugely et al. 2014 [ | Retrospective Cohort ACS NSQIP | Primary/revision THA/TKA Basic/advanced arthroscopy Lower extremity trauma Spinal fusion | Resident involvement correlated with higher morbidity in TJAs, lower extremity trauma, and fusions, but not with increased mortality Operative time was greater with resident involvement in all procedural domains, but longer hospital length of stay and higher 30-day reoperations were only detected in residents involved in lower extremity trauma and fusions |
| Edelstein et al. 2014 [ | Retrospective Cohort ACS NSQIP | Primary THA/TKA Arthroscopic medial and/or lateral meniscectomy Arthroscopic rotator cuff repair Arthroscopic subacromial decompression Open treatment of femoral neck fracture Arthroscopic ACL reconstruction Intramedullary implant for intertrochanteric, pertrochanteric, or subtrochanteric femoral fracture Total shoulder arthroplasty | Resident involvement was associated with increased rates of overall and medical complications, reoperations, as well as increased operative time, relative value units, and hospital length of stay on univariate analysis Resident involvement decreased the odds of overall and medical complications, and did not predict wound complications, reoperations, or readmissions on multivariate analysis |
| Haughom et al. 2014 [ | Retrospective Cohort ACS NSQIP | Primary THA | Resident participation did not increase the odds of developing 30-day complications in patients undergoing primary THA but a longer operative time was required |
| Weber et al. 2017 [ | Retrospective cohort Institutional Data | Primary THA | While patient-reported functional outcomes and complications rates were similar between residents and attendings, operative times were longer in the former group |
| Basques et al. 2018 [ | Retrospective Cohort ACS NSQIP | Shoulder arthroscopy | Resident involvement did not correlate neither with increased odds of 30-day postoperative complications and readmissions, nor increased operative time |
| Lebedeva et al. 2019 [ | Retrospective Cohort ACS NSQIP | ACL reconstruction | Despite longer operative time, resident participation did not increase the risk of 30-day postoperative overall complications rates compared to attendings |
| Zhu et al. 2019 [ | Retrospective Cohort ACS NSQIP | Hand surgery | Operative time and relative value units were significantly higher with resident involvement, which is associated with an opportunity cost to the attending surgeons 30-day complications were not statistically significant between resident involvement and attending only groups |
| Beletsky et al. 2020 [ | Retrospective Cohort ACS NSQIP | Acute/chronic open rotator cuff repair Arthroscopic rotator cuff repair Biceps tenodesis Bankart repair, open shoulder stabilization Bicompartmental/unicompartmental arthroscopic partial meniscectomy ACL repair | Operative time and relative units were significantly higher with resident involvement, which is associated with an opportunity cost to the attending surgeons |
Summary of published studies investigating the impact of resident involvement in knee arthroplasty procedures.
| Study | Study design | Procedure | Outcomes/Differences |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lavernia et al., 2000 [ | Retrospective analysis Institutional data | Primary TKA | Teaching hospitals were associated with significantly higher hospital costs and operative time, with a trend toward higher morbidity in patients undergoing primary TKA |
| Woolson and Kang, 2007 [ | Retrospective cohort Institutional data | Primary THA/TKA | Aside from longer operative times with resident involvement, postsurgical complication rates did not differ between attendings and trainees |
| Gandhi et al., 2009 [ | Retrospective cohort Institutional data | Primary THA/TKA | No significant difference in functional outcomes or patient satisfaction following TJA between academic and community hospitals up to 1 y postoperatively |
| Perfetti et al., 2017 [ | Retrospective cohort NYS SPARCS | Primary TKA | TKA patients in teaching hospitals had longer lengths of stay, higher hospital costs, and 90-d readmissions, but similar discharge disposition status compared with nonteaching institutions |
| Bao et al., 2018 [ | Retrospective cohort Institutional data | Primary TKA | Resident participation did not increase the risk of postoperative hospital length of stay, facility discharge, or worse patient-reported functional outcomes, despite longer operative times in all except senior (PGY5) residents |
| Weber et al., 2018 [ | Retrospective cohort Institutional data | Primary TKA | Operative times were similar among residents and attendings for navigated TKA, but longer in the former group for conventional TKA Patient-reported functional outcomes and complications rates were similar between residents and attendings after 1-y follow-up |
| Storey et al., 2018 [ | Retrospective review New Zealand Joint Registry | Primary TKA/UKA | Despite lengthier operative times with resident involvement, revision rates and patient-reported functional outcomes did not differ between senior residents and attendings but were higher in attendings than in junior and unsupervised residents performing a TKA |
| Theelen et al., 2018 [ | Retrospective analysis from Netherland Institutional data | Primary TKA | Operative time was significantly higher with resident involvement, but no statistical differences were detected in the complication and revision rates, as well as radiographic alignment and patient-reported functional outcomes between attendings and residents |
| Kazarian et al., 2019 [ | Retrospective multicenter cohort Institutional data | Primary TKA | Residents were at higher risk for radiographic outlier and far-outlier malalignment than high-volume attending surgeons |
| Khanuja et al., 2019 [ | Retrospective multicenter cohort Institutional data | Primary TKA (6003 TKA by 41 surgeons) 4024: no trainee (with 40 surgeons) 1979: resident and/or fellow (with 18 surgeons) | No difference in operative time (102 ± 20 vs 115 ± 30 min, |
| Madanipour et al., 2021 [ | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Primary TKA | Included 9 studies of 92,309 arthroplasties, 80,655 were performed by consultants, 11,654 by trainees. No significant difference between the 2 groups’ rate of revision ( Trainees were associated with a lower rate of infection ( No difference in the rate of neurological deficit, transfusion rate, or thrombosis. No difference in operation time ( The trainee group had less favorable functional outcome scores ( |
| Hoerlesberger et al., 2021 [ | Retrospective single-center radiographic cohort study Institutional data | Primary TKA (206 by 2 surgeons, 1:1 matched between attending and PGY-3 resident) | Learning curve showed decrease across time, with differences in deviation points for first, second, and fourth quintiles of cases Incision-to-closure time decreased across quintiles for residents (79.5 to 65.17 mins, respectively), with only the first and second quintile of cases significantly differing from the attending (mean, 66.0 mins; |
| Current study | Prospective cohort Institutional data | Single-staged bilateral primary TKA | Resident participation increased operative time significantly, with exposure and closure as the most time-consuming steps. Resident participation increased total TKA procedure time by 26.7 mins, reflecting an opportunity cost of 1 additional TKA for the attending surgeon for every 3 TKAs performed with active resident participation No difference in patient-reported function, preference, or complications was noted between residents’ and the attending’s operative sides |
THA, total hip arthroplasty; TJA, total joint arthroplasty; PGY, postgraduate year; UKA, unicompartmental knee arthroplasty; NYS SPARCS, New York State Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System.