Imperial Valley Press

Replacemen­t regret

Knee surgery oversold as fix for pain, arthritis

- BY LIZ SZABO

Danette Lake thought surgery would relieve the pain in her knees.

The arthritis pain began as a dull ache in her early 40s, brought on largely by the pressure of unwanted weight. Lake managed to lose 200 pounds through dieting and exercise, but the pain in her knees persisted.

When a doctor said that knee replacemen­t would reduce her arthritis pain by 75 percent, Lake was overjoyed.

“I thought the knee replacemen­t was going to be a cure,” said Lake, now 52 and living in rural Iowa. “I got all excited, thinking, ‘Finally, the pain is going to end and I will have some quality of life.’”

But one year after surgery on her right knee, Lake said she’s still suffering.

“I’m in constant pain, 24/7,” said Lake, who is too disabled to work. “There are times when I can’t even sleep.”

Most knee replacemen­ts are considered successful, and the procedure is known for being safe and cost-effective. Rates of the surgery doubled from 1999 to 2008, with 3.5 million procedures a year expected by 2030.

But Lake’s ordeal illustrate­s the surgery’s risks and limitation­s. Doctors are increasing­ly concerned that the procedure is overused and that its benefits have been oversold.

Inappropri­ate candidates

Research suggests that up to one-third of those who have knees replaced continue to experience chronic pain, while 1 in 5 are dissatisfi­ed with the results. A study published last year in the BMJ found that knee replacemen­t had “minimal effects on quality of life,” especially for patients with less severe arthritis.

One-third of patients who undergo knee replacemen­t may not even be appropriat­e candidates for the procedure, because their arthritis symptoms aren’t severe enough to merit aggressive interventi­on, according to a 2014 study in Arthritis & Rheumatolo­gy.

“We do too many knee replacemen­ts,” said Dr. James Rickert, president of the Society for Patient Centered Orthopedic­s, which advocates for affordable health care.

Although Americans are aging and getting heavier, those factors alone don’t explain the explosive growth in knee replacemen­t. The increase may be fueled by a higher rate of injuries among younger patients and doctors’ greater willingnes­s to operate on younger people, such as those in their 50s and early 60s, said Rickert, an orthopedic surgeon in Bedford, Indiana. That shift has occurred because new implants can last longer — perhaps 20 years — before wearing out.

Yet even the newest models don’t last forever. Over time, implants can loosen and detach from the bone, causing pain. Plastic components of the artificial knee slowly wear out, creating debris that can cause inflammati­on. The wear and tear can cause the knee to break. Patients who remain obese after surgery can put extra pressure on implants, further shortening their lifespan.

The younger patients are, the more likely they are to “outlive” their knee implants and require a second surgery. Revisions are also more likely to cause complicati­ons.

Yet hospitals and surgery centers market knee replacemen­ts heavily, with ads that show patients running, bicycling, even playing basketball after the procedure, said Dr. Nicholas DiNubile, a Havertown, Pa., orthopedic surgeon specializi­ng in sports medicine. While many people with artificial knees can return to moderate exercise, it’s unrealisti­c to imagine them playing full-court basketball again, he said.

Rickert said that some patients are offered surgery they don’t need and that money can be a factor.

Knee replacemen­ts, which cost $31,000 on average, are “really crucial to the financial health of hospitals and doctors’ practices,” he said.

Research suggests that up to one-third of those who have knees replaced continue to experience chronic pain, while 1 in 5 are dissatisfi­ed with the results.

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