CONTEXT: Inpatient rehabilitation after elective hip and knee arthroplasty is often necessary for patients who cannot function at home soon after surgery, but how soon after surgery inpatient rehabilitation can be initiated has not been studied. OBJECTIVE: To test the hypothesis that high-risk patients undergoing elective hip and knee arthroplasty would incur less total cost and experience more rapid functional improvement if inpatient rehabilitation began on postoperative day 3 rather than day 7, without adverse consequences to the patients. DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial conducted from 1994 to 1996. SETTING: Tertiary care center. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 86 patients undergoing elective hip or knee arthroplasty and who met the following criteria for being high risk: 70 years of age or older and living alone, 70 years of age or older with 2 or more comorbid conditions, or any age with 3 or more comorbid conditions. Of the 86 patients, 71 completed the study. INTERVENTIONS: Random assignment to begin inpatient rehabilitation on postoperative day 3 vs postoperative day 7. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Total length of stay and cost from orthopedic and rehabilitation hospital admissions, functional performance in hospitals using a subset of the functional independence measure, and 4-month follow-up assessment using the RAND 36-item health survey I and the functional status index. RESULTS:Patients who completed the study and began inpatient rehabilitation on postoperative day 3 exhibited shorter mean (+/-SD) total length of stay (11.7+/-2.3 days vs 14.5+/-1.9, P<.001), lower mean (+/-SD) total cost ($25891+/-$3648 vs $27762+/-$3626, P<.03), more rapid attainment of short-term functional milestones between days 6 and 10 (36.2+/-14.4 m ambulated vs 21.4+/-13.3 m, P<.001; 4.8+/-0.8 mean transfer functional independence measure score vs 4.3+/-0.7, P<.01), and equivalent functional outcome at 4-month follow-up. CONCLUSION: These data showed that high-risk individuals were able to tolerate early intensive rehabilitation, and this intervention yielded faster attainment of short-term functional milestones in fewer days using less total cost.
RCT Entities:
CONTEXT: Inpatient rehabilitation after elective hip and knee arthroplasty is often necessary for patients who cannot function at home soon after surgery, but how soon after surgery inpatient rehabilitation can be initiated has not been studied. OBJECTIVE: To test the hypothesis that high-risk patients undergoing elective hip and knee arthroplasty would incur less total cost and experience more rapid functional improvement if inpatient rehabilitation began on postoperative day 3 rather than day 7, without adverse consequences to the patients. DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial conducted from 1994 to 1996. SETTING: Tertiary care center. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 86 patients undergoing elective hip or knee arthroplasty and who met the following criteria for being high risk: 70 years of age or older and living alone, 70 years of age or older with 2 or more comorbid conditions, or any age with 3 or more comorbid conditions. Of the 86 patients, 71 completed the study. INTERVENTIONS: Random assignment to begin inpatient rehabilitation on postoperative day 3 vs postoperative day 7. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Total length of stay and cost from orthopedic and rehabilitation hospital admissions, functional performance in hospitals using a subset of the functional independence measure, and 4-month follow-up assessment using the RAND 36-item health survey I and the functional status index. RESULTS:Patients who completed the study and began inpatient rehabilitation on postoperative day 3 exhibited shorter mean (+/-SD) total length of stay (11.7+/-2.3 days vs 14.5+/-1.9, P<.001), lower mean (+/-SD) total cost ($25891+/-$3648 vs $27762+/-$3626, P<.03), more rapid attainment of short-term functional milestones between days 6 and 10 (36.2+/-14.4 m ambulated vs 21.4+/-13.3 m, P<.001; 4.8+/-0.8 mean transfer functional independence measure score vs 4.3+/-0.7, P<.01), and equivalent functional outcome at 4-month follow-up. CONCLUSION: These data showed that high-risk individuals were able to tolerate early intensive rehabilitation, and this intervention yielded faster attainment of short-term functional milestones in fewer days using less total cost.
Authors: Carla Boutin Foster; Delia Gorga; Carolyn Padial; Ann Marie Feretti; Debra Berenson; Robin Kline; Rhonda Belue; Mary E Charlson Journal: Qual Life Res Date: 2004-08 Impact factor: 4.147
Authors: Paul Baker; Carol Coole; Avril Drummond; Sayeed Khan; Catriona McDaid; Catherine Hewitt; Lucksy Kottam; Sarah Ronaldson; Elizabeth Coleman; David A McDonald; Fiona Nouri; Melanie Narayanasamy; Iain McNamara; Judith Fitch; Louise Thomson; Gerry Richardson; Amar Rangan Journal: Health Technol Assess Date: 2020-09 Impact factor: 4.014