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Routine Pathologic Examination of Femoral Head Specimens from Total Hip Arthroplasty May Not Be Indicated or Cost-effective: A Systematic Review.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Nandi, S; Schwarzkopf, R; Chen, A; Seyler, T; Wheeler, L; Parvizi, J; AAHKS Research Committee,
Published in: Arthroplast Today
June 2022

BACKGROUND: There is considerable disparity in institutional practices surrounding routine pathologic examination of femoral heads removed during total hip arthroplasty (THA). Multiple groups have studied the merits of routine femoral head pathology in THA, without clear consensus. We sought to further investigate the existing evidence on routine pathologic examination of femoral heads retrieved during THA to determine if this practice provides additional clinical value and is cost-effective. MATERIAL AND METHODS: To conduct a systematic review of the literature, a medical librarian was consulted to develop and perform comprehensive searches in PubMed (1809-present), Embase (embase.com 1974-present), CINAHL (EBSCO, 1937-present), and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (Wiley). Final searches resulted in 727 references. Through multiple reviewer screenings and assessments of eligible full-text articles, we included 14 articles for review. RESULTS: Our systematic review yielded pathologic examination results from 17,388 femoral head specimens collected during THA. In 0.85% of cases, the pathologic diagnosis differed in a meaningful way from the preoperative clinical diagnosis. Routine pathology changed patient management in approximately 0.0058% of cases. The average cost for pathologic examination of each specimen was $126.38. CONCLUSION: Routine pathologic examination of femoral heads retrieved during THA has limited impact on patient management. With an estimated 500,000 THAs performed in 2019, the economic feasibility of routine femoral head pathology is limited at an annual cost of up to $63,000,000 and cost per quality-adjusted life-year approaching infinity. However, surgeon discretion on a patient-specific or practice-specific basis should be used to make the final determination on the need for femoral head pathology.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Arthroplast Today

DOI

ISSN

2352-3441

Publication Date

June 2022

Volume

15

Start / End Page

182 / 187.e3

Location

United States
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Nandi, S., Schwarzkopf, R., Chen, A., Seyler, T., Wheeler, L., Parvizi, J., & AAHKS Research Committee, . (2022). Routine Pathologic Examination of Femoral Head Specimens from Total Hip Arthroplasty May Not Be Indicated or Cost-effective: A Systematic Review. Arthroplast Today, 15, 182-187.e3. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.artd.2022.03.016
Nandi, Sumon, Ran Schwarzkopf, Antonia Chen, Thorsten Seyler, Lauren Wheeler, Javad Parvizi, and Javad AAHKS Research Committee. “Routine Pathologic Examination of Femoral Head Specimens from Total Hip Arthroplasty May Not Be Indicated or Cost-effective: A Systematic Review.Arthroplast Today 15 (June 2022): 182-187.e3. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.artd.2022.03.016.
Nandi S, Schwarzkopf R, Chen A, Seyler T, Wheeler L, Parvizi J, et al. Routine Pathologic Examination of Femoral Head Specimens from Total Hip Arthroplasty May Not Be Indicated or Cost-effective: A Systematic Review. Arthroplast Today. 2022 Jun;15:182-187.e3.
Nandi, Sumon, et al. “Routine Pathologic Examination of Femoral Head Specimens from Total Hip Arthroplasty May Not Be Indicated or Cost-effective: A Systematic Review.Arthroplast Today, vol. 15, June 2022, pp. 182-187.e3. Pubmed, doi:10.1016/j.artd.2022.03.016.
Nandi S, Schwarzkopf R, Chen A, Seyler T, Wheeler L, Parvizi J, AAHKS Research Committee. Routine Pathologic Examination of Femoral Head Specimens from Total Hip Arthroplasty May Not Be Indicated or Cost-effective: A Systematic Review. Arthroplast Today. 2022 Jun;15:182-187.e3.
Journal cover image

Published In

Arthroplast Today

DOI

ISSN

2352-3441

Publication Date

June 2022

Volume

15

Start / End Page

182 / 187.e3

Location

United States