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The HIHO Study: Hospital Inpatient vs Home Rehabilitation After Total Knee Replacement

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Osteoarthritis
Interventions
Other: Hospital Inpatient Rehabilitation
Other: Hybrid Home Programme (HO)
Registration Number
NCT01583153
Lead Sponsor
Mark Buhagiar
Brief Summary

Total knee replacement (TKR) surgery is a common and highly effective treatment option for alleviating the pain and disability caused by chronic arthritis. The associated rehabilitation costs, however, impose a significant burden on the health system. In particular, inpatient rehabilitation - utilised by approximately 43% of private TKR recipients in NSW and 29% Australia-wide is of greatest concern, costing, on average, $7000 (AU) per inpatient episode.

The overarching aim of this study is to establish whether inpatient rehabilitation is necessary after TKR for patients with osteoarthritis (OA) who could otherwise be discharged directly home.

The main hypothesis to be tested by the proposed study is that TKR recipients who receive inpatient rehabilitation in addition to participating in a home programme, compared to patients who participate in a home programme only, will achieve a superior level of mobility. If superiority is shown, a cost-effectiveness analysis will be undertaken.

Secondary hypotheses to be tested relate to patient-reported knee pain and function, health-related quality of life, functional ambulation, and knee joint mobility.

Superiority in these outcomes will be evident at six months after surgery.

Detailed Description

As preferences for therapy can be a confounder in RCTs, patients will be asked their preference for rehabilitation post TKR, prior to randomisation.

Patients will be randomised once a hospital bed is available.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
165
Inclusion Criteria
  • Consecutive patients presenting for elective, primary, unilateral TKR at the Whitlam Joint Replacement Centre (Fairfield Hospital) will be screened for eligibility at the pre-admission clinic by the study Project Manager (PM).
  • primary diagnosis of OA
Exclusion Criteria
  • predisposition for requiring prolonged inpatient supervision (eg requiring assistance with at least one personal activity of daily living or lack of social support)
  • inability to comprehend the study protocol.
  • catastrophic complication arising post-surgery which precludes rehabilitation commencing within 2-3 weeks of surgery

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Hospital Inpatient Rehabilitation (HI)Hospital Inpatient Rehabilitation-
Hybrid Home Programme (HO)Hybrid Home Programme (HO)-
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Walking distance at 6 months post surgery, measured using the Six-Minute Walk Test (6MWT)Pre surgery; 10 weeks, six months and twelve months after surgery.

Functional mobility is a composite of several factors targeted in rehabilitation programs after TKA such as lower limb strength, knee range of motion, and balance. Second, a functional outcome is more likely to be directly influenced by the intervention (rehabilitation), and the intervention aims to improve walking. Third, the 6MWT is highly reproducible within the individual. Fourth, it is likely to be less susceptible to misinterpretation and less culturally sensitive than patient-reported outcomes. Fifth, the test does not appear to suffer from the floor or ceiling effects associated with many patient-reported outcomes. Sixth, an observer-measured outcome is less likely to be influenced by a preference effect compared to a patient-reported outcome, and this is particularly important when the intervention under examination cannot be blinded from the recipient. Together, these attributes mean the results for our primary outcome should be readily translatable to any TKA cohort.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Knee range of motionPre surgery; 10 weeks, six months and twelve months after surgery.
EQ5DPre surgery; 10 weeks, six months and twelve months after surgery.

The EQ5D is a standardised measure providing a simple, generic measure of health. It looks at mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort and anxiety/depression, and provides a simple descriptive profile and a single index value for health status.

Patient preference for therapyAfter consenting to participation and prior to randomisation

Typical demographic and complication data (such as re-admission, re-operation, knee manipulation, death, venous thrombo-embolism, wound infection) will also be collected. As preferences for therapy can be a confounder in RCTs, patients will be asked their preference for rehabilitation post TKR prior to randomisation. Question may be 'What is your preference for rehab? Is it home based, inpatient or no preference?

Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS)Pre surgery; 10 weeks, six months and twelve months after surgery.
Cost of surgeryPre surgery; 10 weeks, six months and twelve months after surgery.

Itemised list of health service use, expenditure and days off work

15 metre walk testPre surgery; 10 weeks, six months and twelve months after surgery.

Trial Locations

Locations (3)

Fairfield Hospital

🇦🇺

Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

Sutherland Hospital

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Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

Braeside Hospital

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Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

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