Increase in outpatient knee arthroscopy in the United States: a comparison of National Surveys of Ambulatory Surgery, 1996 and 2006.

BACKGROUND This study was proposed to investigate the changes in the utilization of knee arthroscopy in an ambulatory setting over the past decade in the United States as well as its implications. METHODS The National Survey of Ambulatory Surgery, last carried out in 1996, was conducted again in 2006 by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. We analyzed the cases with procedure coding indicative of knee arthroscopy or anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. To produce estimates for all arthroscopic procedures on the knee in an ambulatory setting in the United States for each year, we performed a design-based statistical analysis. RESULTS The number of arthroscopic procedures on the knee increased 49% between 1996 and 2006. While the number of arthroscopic procedures for knee injury had dramatically increased, arthroscopic procedures for knee osteoarthritis had decreased. In 1996, knee arthroscopies performed in freestanding ambulatory surgery centers comprised only 15% of all orthopaedic procedures, but the proportion increased to 51% in 2006. There was a large increase in knee arthroscopy among middle-aged patients regardless of sex. In 2006, >99% of arthroscopic procedures on the knee were in an outpatient setting. Approximately 984,607 arthroscopic procedures on the knee (95% confidence interval, 895,999 to 1,073,215) were performed in an outpatient setting in 2006. Among those, 127,446 procedures (95% confidence interval, 95,124 to 159,768) were for anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. Nearly 500,000 arthroscopic procedures were performed for medial or lateral meniscal tears. CONCLUSIONS This study revealed that the knee arthroscopy rate in the United States was more than twofold higher than in England or Ontario, Canada, in 2006. Our study found that nearly half of the knee arthroscopic procedures were performed for meniscal tears. Meniscal damage, detected by magnetic resonance imaging, is commonly assumed to be the source of pain and symptoms. Further study is imperative to better define the symptoms, physical findings, and radiographic findings that are predictive of successful arthroscopic treatment.

[1]  K. Lumsdon,et al.  New surgical technologies reshape hospital strategies. , 1992, Hospitals.

[2]  N. Polissar,et al.  Factors Affecting Discharge Time in Adult Outpatients , 1998, Anesthesia and analgesia.

[3]  Joshua T. Cohen,et al.  Using decision analysis to better evaluate pediatric clinical guidelines. , 2008, Health affairs.

[4]  Scott W Atlas,et al.  Expanded use of imaging technology and the challenge of measuring value. , 2008, Health affairs.

[5]  J. Carrino,et al.  Trends in utilization: has extremity MR imaging replaced diagnostic arthroscopy? , 2004, Skeletal Radiology.

[6]  H. Franke [A randomized trial of arthroscopic surgery for osteoarthritis of the knee]. , 2008, Forschende Komplementarmedizin.

[7]  C. Stanitski Correlation of Arthroscopic and Clinical Examinations With Magnetic Resonance Imaging Findings of Injured Knees in Children and Adolescents , 1998, The American journal of sports medicine.

[8]  Ali Guermazi,et al.  Incidental meniscal findings on knee MRI in middle-aged and elderly persons. , 2008, The New England journal of medicine.

[9]  G. Hawker,et al.  Knee arthroscopy in England and Ontario: patterns of use, changes over time, and relationship to total knee replacement. , 2008, The Journal of bone and joint surgery. American volume.

[10]  O. Reikerås,et al.  Magnetic resonance imaging as a screening procedure to avoid arthroscopy for meniscal tears , 2000, Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery.

[11]  S. Nemec,et al.  High-resolution magnetic resonance imaging and conventional magnetic resonance imaging on a standard field-strength magnetic resonance system compared to arthroscopy in patients with suspected meniscal tears. , 2008, Academic radiology.

[12]  I. Stiell,et al.  Effect of Arthroscopic Débridement for Osteoarthritis of the Knee on Health-Related Quality of Life* , 2002, The Journal of bone and joint surgery. American volume.

[13]  이두한 Ambulatory surgery. , 1982, The New England journal of medicine.

[14]  I. Winson,et al.  Day-case or short-stay admission for arthroscopic knee surgery: a randomised controlled trial. , 1998, Annals of the Royal College of Surgeons of England.

[15]  D. Miglioretti,et al.  Rising use of diagnostic medical imaging in a large integrated health system. , 2008, Health affairs.

[16]  N Engl,et al.  A controlled trial of arthroscopic surgery for osteoarthritis of the knee , 2005 .

[17]  M. Dougados,et al.  Assessment of progression in knee osteoarthritis: results of a 1 year study comparing arthroscopy and MRI. , 2003, Osteoarthritis and cartilage.

[18]  K. A. Cullen,et al.  Ambulatory surgery in the United States, 2006. , 2009, National health statistics reports.