/_media/adv/web/images/2011/20111124_Arthrex_TB-378x82.jpg

Subscriptions

Advertising

Resources

About Us

Contact Us

Create An Account Forgot Your Password?
Trouble logging in or creating an account? click here
Home This Month E-Weekly Newsletter Building a Facility Article Archive Second Opinions
Search:
Benchmarking
General Surgery
Accrediting/Quality
Anesthesia
Code/Bill/Reimburse
Building/Renovating
/_media/adv/web/images/2011/20110502_Provista_LB-154x100.gif
/_media/adv/web/images/2012/20120126_ASP_LB-154x100.gif
/_media/adv/web/images/2011/20111003_Ansell_LB-154x100.gif
/_media/adv/web/images/2011/20110124_ImageFirst_LB-154x100.gif
Outpatient Surgery E-Weekly

Contact Congress Over Drug Shortage Issues

A Kentucky congressman is urging surgical facilities to contact their members of Congress and request that they sign his letter demanding changes to...

N.J. Posts ASC Inspection Reports Online

State and federal inspection reports of New Jersey's ASCs are now available online, giving patients an opportunity to make more informed choices abo...

Are Opioids Necessary?

While it's not always practical, or even possible, to eliminate opioids from your post-op pain management regiment, reducing their use in favor of n...

Archive > August, 2002 Vol. III, No. 8

This Just In...

Putting Placebo Knee Surgery Study into Perspective

Putting Placebo Knee Surgery Study into Perspective
It's no surprise that knee arthroscopy for arthritis worked no better than a sham procedure in which patients were sedated while surgeons pretended to operate, say a panel of orthopedic surgeons polled by Outpatient Surgery magazine. Just look at the patients included in the study reported in last month's The New England Journal of Medicine: arthritis patients who did not have mechanical symptoms- patients whose knees catch, lock or give way- that arthroscopy can fix fairly easily. The study patients were not going to get better with an operation, so it stands to reason that the results of the operative group would be the same as that of the placebo group.

Unless insurance providers decide not to pay for this procedure, experts say this study will not the change the way orthopods practice medicine. Orthopods have long doubted the efficacy of knee arthroscopy for arthritis, and only perform it on a few patients in a last-ditch effort to provide pain relief - however temporary.

"All I do is knee surgery, and only a very small number of arthritis patients receive arthroscopy," says Douglas Jackson, MD, former president of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) and an orthopedist in Long Beach, Calif. "We try to buy them two to five years of reduced symptoms. We know that arthroscopy does not work for advanced cases."



"The findings...are important tools for examining the role of arthroscopy in treating knee osteoarthritis. However, it's a mistake to use the study to suggest that knee arthroscopy as a whole is ineffective. Knee arthroscopy has been proven effective in treating knee pain caused by torn cartilage or ligaments, conditions far more likely to have arthroscopic treatment than osteoarthritis."

Vernon Tolo, MD
President, American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS)



"The study has value both in giving insight into the placebo effect of surgery and in giving scientific evidence about the efficacy of the procedure with a specific group of patients. The larger meaning of the research, however, should not be construed as saying that knee arthroscopy is an ineffective treatment. Clearly, for the large majority of knee arthroscopy candidates, the procedure is beneficial."

Peter Fowler, MD
President, American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine (AOSSM)



"This should serve as a wakeup call to doctors still doing washouts for arthritis. The study has merit in confirming what the orthopedics community at large already knew: knee arthroscopy doesn't do a lot of good for treating arthritis, unless there are corresponding mechanical problems with the knee. On a broader level, we're going to have to start from the beginning explaining knee arthroscopy to patients."

S. Terry Canale, MD
Germantown, Tenn.
Past President, AAOS



The indications for patients with osteoarthritis that would make them candidates for arthroscopic knee surgery are pain, swelling and the mechanical symptoms of catching, locking or giving way. Once the arthritis becomes too advanced and the leg becomes deformed or bowed, arthroscopic procedures have little benefit. James Tibone, MD, of the University of Southern California Department of Orthopaedics, routinely dissuades arthritis patients from having knee arthroscopy. "Well before this article ever came out, it was my practice to talk people out of this procedure," says Dr. Tibone. "It only gives temporary relief to arthritis symptoms. Sometimes we're stuck with doing it, but only on patients who have already tried everything else and failed, and are too young for a knee replacement."

This is not to say that arthritis is not amenable to arthroscopic surgery, only that there are a couple of different spectrums that you don't operate on:
  • those patients who have pain alone and can be managed conservatively;
  • those patients whose osteoarthritis is too severe to surgically manage.


The NEJM study titled "A Controlled Trial of Arthroscopic Surgery for Osteoarthritis of the Knee" reports on 180 Veterans Administration hospital patients with osteoarthritis of the knee who were randomly assigned to receive arthroscopic debridement, arthroscopic lavage or placebo surgery. Outcomes assessed over a two-year period show that patients who had arthroscopy did not benefit any more than patients who underwent the placebo.



"The findings are no surprise to the medical community, which knows how to interpret the results. The problem is that the lay press has sensationalized the study and...made a crisis where there really does not have to be one. For one, by implication, the study overstates the number of these procedures that are done for osteoarthritis patients. Secondly, some patients medically should still be considered candidates for this treatment option because other methods have failed but they are not ready for a total knee replacement. This is especially true for patients with mechanical problems in their knees. The study does not indicate this."

Abbott "Bo" Kagan, MD
Fort Meyers, Fla.
President Florida Orthopaedics Society



"Knee arthroscopy remains a valid and important treatment modality for a large number of arthritis patients, particularly early in the disease process. Unfortunately, those participating in this study really needed total knee arthroplasty, not arthroscopy. Definitive care, not placebo surgery, is what all arthritis patients deserve, and is, hopefully, what they will continue to receive."

W. Wayne Malone, RN
Director, Surgical Services
Texas Orthopedic Hospital
Houston, Tex.



The study broke patients down into three categories:
  • the traditional arthroscopic debridement group, a clean-up of the joint;
  • a group who had saline fluid flushed through the joint;
  • the placebo or "sham" arm of the study who had a knife stuck in their skin to create three superficial incisions in the knee. An assistant sloshed water in a bucket to make the sound of a knee being flushed clean.


- Judith Lee

Hospital's Failure to Follow AORN Infection Prevention Recommendations Costs Lives

Sign in to continue reading.
Email Address:
Password:
Categories: Business Management, Orthopedics, News
Keywords:
AORN Infection Prevention Recommendations Costs Lives Four; AORN's; Academy; Administration; American Academy; American Orthopaedic Society; Arthroscopic Surgery; Association; California Department; Canale, MD Germantown, Tenn. Past President, AAOS The; Connecticut; Controlled Trial; Costs Lives Four; Definitive; Department; England Journal; Failure; Follow AORN Infection Prevention Recommendations Costs Lives Four; Fowler, MD President, American Orthopaedic Society; Hospital Houston, Tex. The; Infection Prevention Recommendations Costs Lives Four; Journal; Judith Lee Hospital's Failure; Knee;... show all keywords
AORN Infection Prevention Recommendations Costs Lives Four; AORN's; Academy; Administration; American Academy; American Orthopaedic Society; Arthroscopic Surgery; Association; California Department; Canale, MD Germantown, Tenn. Past President, AAOS The; Connecticut; Controlled Trial; Costs Lives Four; Definitive; Department; England Journal; Failure; Follow AORN Infection Prevention Recommendations Costs Lives Four; Fowler, MD President, American Orthopaedic Society; Hospital Houston, Tex. The; Infection Prevention Recommendations Costs Lives Four; Journal; Judith Lee Hospital's Failure; Knee; Knee Surgery Study; Lee Hospital's Failure; Lives Four; MD Germantown, Tenn. Past President, AAOS The; MD President, American Academy; MD President, American Orthopaedic Society; Malone, RN Director, Surgical Services Texas Orthopedic Hospital Houston, Tex. The; Medicine; NEJM; Nurses; Orthopaedic Society; Orthopaedic Surgeons; Orthopedic Hospital Houston, Tex. The; Orthopods; Osteoarthritis; Outcomes; Outpatient Surgery; PerspectiveIt's; Placebo Knee Surgery Study; President, AAOS The; Prevention Recommendations Costs Lives Four; Putting Placebo Knee Surgery Study; RN Director, Surgical Services Texas Orthopedic Hospital Houston, Tex. The; Recommendations Costs Lives Four; Registered Nurses; Services Texas Orthopedic Hospital Houston, Tex. The; Society; Southern California Department; Sports Medicine; Study; Surgeons; Surgery; Surgery Study; Surgical Services Texas Orthopedic Hospital Houston, Tex. The; Tenn. Past President, AAOS The; Terry Canale, MD Germantown, Tenn. Past President, AAOS The; Tex. The; Tolo, MD President, American Academy; Trial; University; Veterans Administration; Wayne Malone, RN Director, Surgical Services Texas Orthopedic Hospital Houston, Tex. The; advanced; air; amenable; and...made; arm; arthritis; arthroscopic; arthroscopy; article; assessed; assigned; assistant; beginning; benefit; broader; broke; bucket; buy; call; candidates; cartilage; caused; change; chief; clean-up; community; conditions; confirming; conservatively; those; considered; construed; continue; couple; create; crisis; debridement; decide; deemed; deformed; died; disease; dissuades; doctors; doubted; early; effect; effective; efficacy; effort; evidence; examining; experts; explaining; failed; fairly; filration; findings; findings...are; fix; fluid; flushed; give; giving; good; group; group.Unless; hired; hospital; important; incisions; included; indications; ineffective; infection; insight; install; insurance; interpret; joint; a; joint; the; knee; knees; knife; large; larger; last-ditch; lavage; lay; leg; lock; locking; long; lot; majority; make; manage.The; managed; meaning; mechanical; medical; medically; merit; methods; mistake; modality; month's; needed; number; operate; operative; option; orthopedic; orthopedist; orthopods; osteoarthritis; overstates; pain; panel; participating; patients; pay; people; perform; periOperative; period; placebo; polled; practice; president; press; pretended; preventable; problem; problems; procedure; procedures; proven; provide; providers; randomly; ready; reason; receive; recommendation; reduced; relief; remains; reported; reports; results; role; routinely; saline; scientific; sedated; sensationalized; serve; severe; sham; show; skin; sloshed; small; solve; sound; specific; spectrums; stands; start; stuck; study; suggest; superficial; surgeons; surgery; surgically; surprise; swelling; symptoms; system; talk; temporary; titled; tools; torn; total; traditional; treating; treatment; true; two-year; underwent; valid; wakeup; washouts; water; work; worked; years; young

© Copyright Herrin Publishing Partners LP 2011. REPRODUCTION OF THIS COPYRIGHTED CONTENT IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. We encourage LINKING to this content; view our linking policy here.

PRODUCT & SERVICE RESOURCES
Did You See This?
A showcase of products and services geared to make your facility better.

Architects' Showcase
Is a beautiful, efficient new facility in your future?
/_media/adv/web/images/2012/20120115_Olympus_AR-300x250.jpg
Other Articles That May Interest You
Anesthesiologist's Alleged Racist Comments Protected By Law, Court Rules
Ophthalmologist sued anesthesia provider for making derogatory statements about Hispanic patients in meeting.
N.J. Gov. Vetoes Single-Room Surgery Change
Proposed licensing legislation "effectively killed."
Top Cataract Surgeon's Delegating Didn't Defraud Medicare, Court Rules
Former patient filed suit over unsupervised physician assistant's big role in surgery.