Factors influencing UK arthroplasty surgeons' decision‐making between total and medial unicompartmental knee surgery: A vignette‐based behavioural experiment

Abstract Purpose Surgical options for end‐stage knee osteoarthritis (OA) include total and medial unicompartmental knee replacement (TKR and UKR). Deciding which surgery to perform is complex and ill‐defined, yet it has important implications for patients and the health service. The study aimed to i...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Martine Nurek, Omar Musbahi, Martinique Vella Baldacchino, Robert Hamm, Caroline B. Hing, Justin Cobb, Olga Kostopoulou, UNITES Consortium
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-01-01
Series:Journal of Experimental Orthopaedics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/jeo2.70178
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850152013452541952
author Martine Nurek
Omar Musbahi
Martinique Vella Baldacchino
Robert Hamm
Caroline B. Hing
Justin Cobb
Olga Kostopoulou
UNITES Consortium
author_facet Martine Nurek
Omar Musbahi
Martinique Vella Baldacchino
Robert Hamm
Caroline B. Hing
Justin Cobb
Olga Kostopoulou
UNITES Consortium
author_sort Martine Nurek
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Purpose Surgical options for end‐stage knee osteoarthritis (OA) include total and medial unicompartmental knee replacement (TKR and UKR). Deciding which surgery to perform is complex and ill‐defined, yet it has important implications for patients and the health service. The study aimed to identify clinical and surgeon factors predicting surgeons' preferences. Methods Based on a preliminary survey of 162 UK surgeons, we identified clinical features frequently considered when deciding between TKR and UKR. By systematically varying patient age, obesity, site of pain, anaesthetic risk and anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) integrity, we constructed 32 clinical vignettes. We used these in a new survey, where surgeons indicated which surgery they would recommend on an 11‐point rating scale with end points anchored at ‘definitely TKR’ and ‘definitely medial UKR’. Data were analysed with mixed‐effects linear regressions. Results Eighty‐three UK arthroplasty surgeons completed the vignettes. Preference for UKR over TKR was significantly lower for patients over 50 years (b = −0.57 [−0.82 to −0.33], p < 0.001) with abnormal ACL (b = −1.93 [−2.17 to −1.68], p < 0.001) and severe systemic disease (b = −0.46 [−0.70 to −0.21], p < 0.001). Obesity was a weak and unreliable predictor, and we did not detect any influence of site of pain. The surgeons' habitual practice (proportion of UKRs over all knee replacements performed in a typical year) was the second strongest predictor after ACL (b = 1.26 [0.54–1.99], p = 0.001). Conclusions ACL integrity was the most important determinant of surgeons' preferences between TKR and UKR. Their habitual practice was also a strong predictor, outweighing most clinical factors in the vignettes. Level of Evidence Level II, prospective cohort study.
format Article
id doaj-art-eda98d5c950b4281844c32458d04cc5b
institution OA Journals
issn 2197-1153
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Journal of Experimental Orthopaedics
spelling doaj-art-eda98d5c950b4281844c32458d04cc5b2025-08-20T02:26:05ZengWileyJournal of Experimental Orthopaedics2197-11532025-01-01121n/an/a10.1002/jeo2.70178Factors influencing UK arthroplasty surgeons' decision‐making between total and medial unicompartmental knee surgery: A vignette‐based behavioural experimentMartine Nurek0Omar Musbahi1Martinique Vella Baldacchino2Robert Hamm3Caroline B. Hing4Justin Cobb5Olga Kostopoulou6UNITES ConsortiumDepartment of Surgery and Cancer Imperial College London London UKMSk Lab, Sir Michael Uren Hub Imperial College London London UKMSk Lab, Sir Michael Uren Hub Imperial College London London UKUniversity of Oklahoma Oklahoma USASt George's Hospital NHS Foundation Trust London UKMSk Lab, Sir Michael Uren Hub Imperial College London London UKDepartment of Surgery and Cancer Imperial College London London UKAbstract Purpose Surgical options for end‐stage knee osteoarthritis (OA) include total and medial unicompartmental knee replacement (TKR and UKR). Deciding which surgery to perform is complex and ill‐defined, yet it has important implications for patients and the health service. The study aimed to identify clinical and surgeon factors predicting surgeons' preferences. Methods Based on a preliminary survey of 162 UK surgeons, we identified clinical features frequently considered when deciding between TKR and UKR. By systematically varying patient age, obesity, site of pain, anaesthetic risk and anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) integrity, we constructed 32 clinical vignettes. We used these in a new survey, where surgeons indicated which surgery they would recommend on an 11‐point rating scale with end points anchored at ‘definitely TKR’ and ‘definitely medial UKR’. Data were analysed with mixed‐effects linear regressions. Results Eighty‐three UK arthroplasty surgeons completed the vignettes. Preference for UKR over TKR was significantly lower for patients over 50 years (b = −0.57 [−0.82 to −0.33], p < 0.001) with abnormal ACL (b = −1.93 [−2.17 to −1.68], p < 0.001) and severe systemic disease (b = −0.46 [−0.70 to −0.21], p < 0.001). Obesity was a weak and unreliable predictor, and we did not detect any influence of site of pain. The surgeons' habitual practice (proportion of UKRs over all knee replacements performed in a typical year) was the second strongest predictor after ACL (b = 1.26 [0.54–1.99], p = 0.001). Conclusions ACL integrity was the most important determinant of surgeons' preferences between TKR and UKR. Their habitual practice was also a strong predictor, outweighing most clinical factors in the vignettes. Level of Evidence Level II, prospective cohort study.https://doi.org/10.1002/jeo2.70178decision‐makingknee arthroplastyosteoarthritistotal knee arthroplastyunicompartmental
spellingShingle Martine Nurek
Omar Musbahi
Martinique Vella Baldacchino
Robert Hamm
Caroline B. Hing
Justin Cobb
Olga Kostopoulou
UNITES Consortium
Factors influencing UK arthroplasty surgeons' decision‐making between total and medial unicompartmental knee surgery: A vignette‐based behavioural experiment
Journal of Experimental Orthopaedics
decision‐making
knee arthroplasty
osteoarthritis
total knee arthroplasty
unicompartmental
title Factors influencing UK arthroplasty surgeons' decision‐making between total and medial unicompartmental knee surgery: A vignette‐based behavioural experiment
title_full Factors influencing UK arthroplasty surgeons' decision‐making between total and medial unicompartmental knee surgery: A vignette‐based behavioural experiment
title_fullStr Factors influencing UK arthroplasty surgeons' decision‐making between total and medial unicompartmental knee surgery: A vignette‐based behavioural experiment
title_full_unstemmed Factors influencing UK arthroplasty surgeons' decision‐making between total and medial unicompartmental knee surgery: A vignette‐based behavioural experiment
title_short Factors influencing UK arthroplasty surgeons' decision‐making between total and medial unicompartmental knee surgery: A vignette‐based behavioural experiment
title_sort factors influencing uk arthroplasty surgeons decision making between total and medial unicompartmental knee surgery a vignette based behavioural experiment
topic decision‐making
knee arthroplasty
osteoarthritis
total knee arthroplasty
unicompartmental
url https://doi.org/10.1002/jeo2.70178
work_keys_str_mv AT martinenurek factorsinfluencingukarthroplastysurgeonsdecisionmakingbetweentotalandmedialunicompartmentalkneesurgeryavignettebasedbehaviouralexperiment
AT omarmusbahi factorsinfluencingukarthroplastysurgeonsdecisionmakingbetweentotalandmedialunicompartmentalkneesurgeryavignettebasedbehaviouralexperiment
AT martiniquevellabaldacchino factorsinfluencingukarthroplastysurgeonsdecisionmakingbetweentotalandmedialunicompartmentalkneesurgeryavignettebasedbehaviouralexperiment
AT roberthamm factorsinfluencingukarthroplastysurgeonsdecisionmakingbetweentotalandmedialunicompartmentalkneesurgeryavignettebasedbehaviouralexperiment
AT carolinebhing factorsinfluencingukarthroplastysurgeonsdecisionmakingbetweentotalandmedialunicompartmentalkneesurgeryavignettebasedbehaviouralexperiment
AT justincobb factorsinfluencingukarthroplastysurgeonsdecisionmakingbetweentotalandmedialunicompartmentalkneesurgeryavignettebasedbehaviouralexperiment
AT olgakostopoulou factorsinfluencingukarthroplastysurgeonsdecisionmakingbetweentotalandmedialunicompartmentalkneesurgeryavignettebasedbehaviouralexperiment
AT unitesconsortium factorsinfluencingukarthroplastysurgeonsdecisionmakingbetweentotalandmedialunicompartmentalkneesurgeryavignettebasedbehaviouralexperiment