Questioning Medicine podcast

Episode 419: 426. Go Big or Go Partial? The Knee Replacement Showdown

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Setting the stage

Picture this: your knee is like a three-room apartment. You've got a medial room, a lateral room, and a patellofemoral room. In isolated anteromedial osteoarthritis, just one room is trashed. The rest of the apartment still looks like something you'd put on a rental listing.

 

So surgeons have two choices:

 

Option A: Total knee arthroplasty, or TKA - bulldoze the entire apartment and rebuild it.

 

Option B: Medial unicompartmental knee arthroplasty, or UKA - fix the one bad room and leave the rest alone.

 

Previous work suggested that partial knees can actually hold up pretty well when only that medial compartment is involved. But we needed a high-quality, double-blind, multicenter randomized trial to really settle the argument-because if there's anything surgeons love more than power tools, it's being right.

 

The Danish showdown

Enter Denmark, land of bicycles, universal healthcare, and apparently, a lot of unicompartmental knees. UKA is done more often there than in many other countries, which means they actually have surgeons who are very good at it.

 

In this new trial, 350 patients with isolated anteromedial osteoarthritis were randomized to either:

 

Medial unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA), or

 

Total knee arthroplasty (TKA).

 

All participating surgeons had substantial experience with both procedures-important, because UKA is more technically demanding. This is not the operation you want someone learning from a YouTube video the night before.

 

And here's the fun methodological twist: for the first year, both the patients and the evaluators were blinded to which procedure had been done. That's right-people walking around with brand-new metal hardware in their knees, and no one was allowed to know which version they got. It's like the orthopedics version of a mystery box subscription.

 

What did they measure?

The primary outcome was improvement on a standardized 48-point scale reflecting pain and function over 2 years-essentially, "how good does your knee feel, and what can you do with it?"

 

 

They also looked at a bunch of secondary outcomes: different aspects of pain, day-to-day function, range of motion, and so on.

 

So: same surgeons, similar patients, blinded follow-up, partial versus total. Let's talk results.

 

Drumroll: who won?

At the 2-year mark:

 

The average improvement on the primary pain-and-function scale was better with UKA than with TKA.

 

The mean difference was 3.5 points, and the threshold for "minimal clinically important difference" was considered 4 points. So UKA got very close-call it "clinically almost important, but statistically clearly better."

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