The projected burden of primary total knee and hip replacement for osteoarthritis in Australia to the year 2030
The Royal Melbourne Hospital · Monash University · +6 more institutions
Abstract
Comprehensive national joint replacement registries with well-validated data offer unique opportunities for examining the potential future burden of hip and knee osteoarthritis (OA) at a population level. This study aimed to forecast the burden of primary total knee (TKR) and hip replacements (THR) performed for OA in Australia to the year 2030, and to model the impact of contrasting obesity scenarios on TKR burden.
De-identified TKR and THR data for 2003-2013 were obtained from the Australian Orthopaedic Association National Joint Replacement Registry. Population projections and obesity trends were obtained from the Australian Bureau of Statistics, with public and private hospital costs sourced from the National Hospital Cost Data Collection. Procedure rates were projected according to two scenarios: (1) constant rate of surgery from 2013 onwards; and (2) continued growth in surgery rates based on 2003-2013 growth. Sensitivity analyses were used to estimate future TKR burden if: (1) obesity rates continued to increase linearly; or (2) 1-5% of the overweight or obese population attained a normal body mass index.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 47.40
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 46
Authors
7- INIlana N. AckermanCorresponding
The Royal Melbourne Hospital, Monash University
- MBMegan Bohensky
The Royal Melbourne Hospital, The University of Melbourne
- EZElla Zomer
Monash University
- MTMark Tacey
Northern Hospital, Melbourne Health, Monash University
- AGAlexandra Gorelik
The Royal Melbourne Hospital, The University of Melbourne, Australian Catholic University
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Overweight
- Body mass index
- Population
- Obesity
- Knee replacement
- Osteoarthritis
- Sports medicine