To test our hypothesis, we performed two studies that were approved by an Institutional Review Board (Central Region, Intermountain Healthcare, Salt Lake City, UT). The studies were performed in accordance with the ethical standards as laid down in the 1964 Declaration of Helsinki and its later amendments or comparable ethical standards.
In Study 1, we retrospectively reviewed the medical charts of 472 patients who underwent elective primary unilateral TKA (n = 302) or UKA (n = 170) from January 2009 to December 2012 by one orthopedic surgeon at a single institution (The Orthopedic Specialty Hospital, Murray, UT). Patients were identified using the International Classification of Diseases 9th revision, and all patients were diagnosed with knee OA from X-ray images and voluntarily elected for knee arthroplasty. Demographic and surgery variables were recorded for each patient. Patients were excluded from analysis if they underwent bilateral procedures, were re-admitted within 90 days of surgery, had pre- or postoperative infection, had DVT or PE, or received a blood transfusion, manipulation, or autologous blood salvage. Patients were also excluded from analysis if they were lacking an American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) score, or the pain and Knee Outcome Survey scores were not documented at physical therapy.
Following screening, 111 TKA (Zimmer Total Knee; Zimmer, Inc., Warsaw, IN, USA) and 74 UKA (Oxford® Partial Knee; Biomet Orthopedics, Warsaw, IN, USA) patients were included in the final analysis. Patients who underwent UKA displayed isolated anteromedial compartment degeneration, a well-preserved lateral compartment, no greater than mild patellofemoral degenerative changes, and an intact anterior cruciate ligament. TKA was performed in patients who did not satisfy the criteria for UKA as determined by one orthopedic surgeon. Tolerable pain levels, normal venous blood O2 and blood count, and no signs of PE were required before inpatient discharge after surgery.
In Study 2, we retrospectively identified patients (cases) who underwent elective primary unilateral TKA at a single facility (The Orthopedic Specialty Hospital, Murray, UT) and developed postoperative VTE (i.e., DVT, PE, or both) during inpatient care. Patients who underwent elective primary unilateral TKA without developing VTE during inpatient care served as controls. Cases were identified using the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Patient Safety Indicator 12 criteria [16], and the International Classification of Diseases 9th revision. The presence or absence of VTE was confirmed in each patient’s discharge notes. In all cases, DVTs were identified using ultrasound and PEs were identified by chest computed tomography angiogram. Ultrasound and chest computed tomography angiograms were not performed in asymptomatic patients who were identified as controls.
To minimize the variability in surgical procedures, components, and perioperative treatments, data extraction was limited from January 1, 2010 to the end of December 2012. During this period, eleven patients (from 1,339 primary unilateral TKAs; 0.82 %) were identified as experiencing postoperative (day 1 or day 2) VTE. Cases were matched to surgeon, gender, body mass index (BMI), and age controls (two controls for every case). Each case was matched to asymptomatic patients who underwent surgery by the same surgeon and were of the same gender, age, and BMI. Investigators responsible for matching were blinded to blood chemistry results. We were unable to identify controls for one case with an exceptionally high BMI (46.7 kg/m2), and therefore, this case was excluded from data analysis. The final analysis consisted of twenty controls and ten cases (DVT, n = 5; PE, n = 4; DVT and PE, n = 1).
Cases were further identified as having a history of diabetes (n = 2), heart problems (e.g., previous heart attack, irregular heartbeat, angina, heart failure; n = 1), previous blood clot, transfusion or bleeding tendency (n = 1), or cancer (n = 2). Controls had a history of diabetes (n = 4), heart problems (n = 10), previous blood clot, transfusion or bleeding tendency (n = 5), stroke (n = 1), multiple sclerosis (n = 1), or cancer (n = 2). Controls contained two former and one current smoker, while none of the cases reported a previous or current smoking habit.
The ASA physical status classification score was recorded for each subject. Five subjects (two cases and three controls) received 4–8 mg of dexamethasone before induction of anesthesia. The exclusion of these patients from the statistical analysis did not change the significance of the NLR between groups, and therefore, were included in the final analysis.
All patients were treated with compression stockings from the time of surgery as well as a prophylactic anticoagulant. Ten cases and sixteen controls were titrated with 5 mg of Coumadin® (Bristol-Myers Squibb, New York, NY, USA) in order to achieve an INR target of 1.5–2.0. Two controls were treated with Xarelto® (Leverkusen, Germany) (monitored by anticoagulation monitoring clinic) and two controls with Arixtra® (GlaxoSmithKline, Research Triangle Park, NC, USA) (2.5 mg subcutaneously). Five cases were administered Lovenox® (Sanofi-Aventis, Bridgewater, NJ, USA) when their INR values were <2.0.
For the TKA groups in Study 1 and Study 2, preoperative (morning of surgery and following a 10-h fast) and postoperative (day 1 and day 2; the morning after surgery and following a 10-h fast during inpatient care) blood chemistries were performed at a hospital laboratory (blinded) and results were extracted from an electronic database warehouse. For the UKA group in Study 1, blood chemistries were performed preoperative (morning of surgery and following a 10-h fast) and on day 1 (the morning after surgery and following a 10-h fast during inpatient care). Blood chemistries for the UKA group in Study 1 were limited to postoperative day 1 since a postoperative blood draw on day 2 is not a standard of care procedure for the participating surgeon. The NLR was calculated from the absolute neutrophil and lymphocyte counts.
Data were checked for normality prior to all statistical analyses with the Shapiro–Wilk test. To test the hypothesis for Study 1, and because the data were not normally distributed, we performed a Friedman two-way analysis of variance test followed by multiple pairwise comparisons when appropriate to determine if the NLR was different between TKA and UKA patients prior to and following surgery. Likewise, separate Friedman two-way analysis of variance tests followed by multiple pairwise comparisons when appropriate were performed to determine if the neutrophil and lymphocyte counts were different between TKA and UKA patients prior to and following surgery. To test the hypothesis for Study 2, we performed univariate logistic regression to determine if the NLR on day 1 predicted VTE on day 1 and day 2 post TKA. Separate repeated measures analysis of variance followed by Bonferroni corrections on multiple pairwise comparisons was performed when appropriate on other repeated measure variables for Study 2. The statistical significance of subject characteristics was assessed with separate t tests for Study 1 and Study 2. The length of stay and ASA score were assessed with separate Pearson chi-squared tests. All statistical analyses were performed with SYSTAT (version 13.1, Chicago, IL USA). Data are presented as mean (SD) unless noted otherwise.