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- Title
Fulfillment of expectations influence patient satisfaction 5 years after total knee arthroplasty.
- Authors
Lützner, Cornelia; Postler, Anne; Beyer, Franziska; Kirschner, Stephan; Lützner, Jörg
- Abstract
<bold>Purpose: </bold>Constant efforts have been made to improve prosthesis design in total knee arthroplasty (TKA), but a significant number of patients remain dissatisfied postoperatively. Besides poor improvement in pain or function, poor fulfillment of patients expectations were identified as contributing factors. Purpose of the study was to assess fulfillment of patients' expectations and satisfaction with TKA 5 years after surgery.<bold>Methods: </bold>A total of 103 patients from a prospective randomised study of a high-flexion or standard TKA implant were investigated 5 years after surgery and patient-reported outcomes (PRO), fulfillment of expectations and satisfaction with the result of the surgery were obtained.<bold>Results: </bold>There were no differences in PROs, fulfillment of expectations and satisfaction between both implant designs. In total, the patients had high expectations preoperatively, mainly related to pain relief and functional abilities. A total of 89.4% of these expectations were fulfilled. No re-interventions (p < 0.001) and male gender (p = 0.017) were the most important predictors of higher fulfillment of expectations. Satisfaction scored highly at 8.2 out of 10 and most patients (93.2%) would undergo the surgery again. Higher Knee Score (p = 0.012) and fulfillment of expectations (p = 0.002) were correlated with higher satisfaction.<bold>Conclusion: </bold>Five years after surgery fulfillment of expectations and satisfaction were high regardless of implant design and did significantly influence patient satisfaction. Surgeons should be aware of the importance of patients' expectations and their influence on satisfaction after TKA. Therefore, the probability of fulfillment should be discussed during shared decision making for TKA.<bold>Level Of Evidence: </bold>I.
- Subjects
TOTAL knee replacement; PATIENT satisfaction; ARTHROPLASTY; KNEE surgery; ORTHOPEDIC implants; ARTIFICIAL knees; LONGITUDINAL method; MOTIVATION (Psychology); POSTOPERATIVE period; SATISFACTION
- Publication
Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy, 2019, Vol 27, Issue 7, p2061
- ISSN
0942-2056
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1007/s00167-018-5320-9