Issue: January 2020

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December 01, 2019
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BMI predicted infection after TKA better than adipose tissue

Issue: January 2020
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Simon W. Young

DALLAS — Results presented at the American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons Annual Meeting showed BMI was a better predictor of periprosthetic joint infection after total knee arthroplasty compared with local measures of adipose tissue.

Simon W. Young, MD, MBChB, FRACS, and colleagues recorded demographics, comorbidities, surgical duration and postoperative infection status within 1 year of surgery for 4,700 patients who underwent TKA between January 2013 and December 2016. Researchers analyzed preoperative weight-bearing anteroposterior and lateral X-rays to determine pre-patellar adipose thickness, bony width of the tibial plateau and total soft-tissue knee width, and calculated a knee adipose index (KAI) from the ratio of bone to total knee width.

Researchers identified 31 periprosthetic joint infections (PJI). The KAI had no statistical association with PJI, according to Young.

“When we looked at pre-patella fat thickness, there was perhaps a slightly more visible trend, but still no statistically significant association,” he said.

However, he noted there was a correlation between BMI and PJI, with an increased risk of PJI among patients with a BMI greater than 35 kg/m2.

When we put [BMI] through a multivariable model, it held up well with an increased odds ratio of 2.9 for a BMI greater than 35 [kg/m2],” Young said. – by Casey Tingle

Reference:

Young SW, et al. Paper 22. Presented at: American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons Annual Meeting; Nov. 7-10, 2019; Dallas.

For more information:

Simon W. Young, MD, MBChB, FRACS, can be reached at University of Auckland, 124 Shakespeare Road, Takapuna Private Bag 93-503, Auckland 0740, New Zealand; email: simon.young@auckland.ac.nz.

Disclosure: Young reports he is a board or committee member for AAHKS; is a paid presenter or speaker for Arthrex, Smith & Nephew and Stryker; is a paid consultant for Stryker; receives research support from Stryker and Vidacare; and has stock or stock options from Surgical Solutions.