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JOA - 2026-04-20 - Journal Article

The Impact of Preoperative Activity on Postoperative Outcomes in Total Knee Arthroplasty: A Retrospective Cohort Analysis.

Wang J, Narayan G, Trivedi V, Vivekananthan A, Horani K, Weiss WM

retrospective cohortLOE IIIn = 4,090 (2,045 active, 2,045 inactive after propensity score matching)3 years

Topics

arthroplastytrauma
PMID: 42019781DOI: 10.1016/j.arth.2026.04.057View on PubMed ->

Key Takeaway

Preoperatively active TKA patients had lower revision surgery risk at 1, 2, and 3 years but paradoxically higher hardware failure risk at 2 and 3 years compared to inactive patients in a propensity-matched cohort of 4,090.

Summary Depth

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Summary

This study examined whether preoperative physical activity within 6 months of primary TKA affects postoperative complication rates using a large national database with propensity score matching. Active patients demonstrated significantly lower revision surgery risk at 1 year (P=0.047), 2 years (P=0.008), and 3 years (P=0.007). However, active patients also showed significantly higher hardware failure risk at 2 years (P=0.008) and 3 years (P=0.026), with no significant differences in readmission, periprosthetic fracture, or opioid abuse.

Key Limitation

Activity classification derived from administrative database coding lacks standardization and objective validation, making it impossible to distinguish activity type, intensity, or duration, which are the mechanistic variables most relevant to both protective and adverse outcomes.

Original Abstract

BACKGROUND

Preoperative activity levels may influence postoperative outcomes in total knee arthroplasty (TKA) patients. This study investigates how preoperative activity impacts the risks of revision surgery and sepsis at one, two, and three years following TKA.

METHODS

A retrospective cohort analysis was conducted using a large national database. Adult patients undergoing primary TKA between January 1, 2010, and December 31, 2023, were included. Patients were stratified into "active" and "inactive" cohorts based on documented preoperative physical activity within six months prior to surgery. Outcomes assessed included revision surgery, hardware failure, hospital readmission, periprosthetic fracture, opioid abuse, and postoperative stiffness or limited range of motion. Risk ratios and 95% confidence intervals were calculated, with significance defined as P < 0.05. After propensity score matching, 4,090 patients were included (2,045 active and 2,045 inactive).

RESULTS

At one year postoperatively, active patients had a lower risk of revision surgery (P = 0.047), with a nonsignificant trend toward reduced postoperative stiffness (P = 0.057). At two years, activity was associated with both a reduced risk of revision surgery (P = 0.008) and an increased risk of hardware failure (P = 0.008). At three years, this pattern persisted, with lower revision risk (P = 0.007) but higher hardware failure risk (P = 0.026). There were no significant differences observed in hospital readmission, periprosthetic fractures, or opioid abuse across timepoints.

CONCLUSIONS

Preoperative physical activity is associated with both protective and adverse outcomes following TKA. Higher activity levels were consistently linked to reduced risk of revision surgery up to three years postoperatively as well as an increased risk of hardware failure. These findings highlight the complex role of preoperative activity in shaping postoperative trajectories and underscore the need for further research to clarify mechanisms driving these associations.