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NewsOctober 22, 2015

People with knees worn out by arthritis will get more pain relief from joint replacement surgery, but it has more risks, and there's a good chance less drastic approaches would help. That's the bottom line from the first study strictly to test other treatments against knee replacement, an operation done hundreds of thousands of times a year in the U.S...

By MARILYNN MARCHIONE ~ Associated Press
A doctor holds a model of a tri-compartmental total knee replacement in Chicago. (M. Spencer Green ~ Associated Press)
A doctor holds a model of a tri-compartmental total knee replacement in Chicago. (M. Spencer Green ~ Associated Press)

People with knees worn out by arthritis will get more pain relief from joint replacement surgery, but it has more risks, and there's a good chance less drastic approaches would help.

That's the bottom line from the first study strictly to test other treatments against knee replacement, an operation done hundreds of thousands of times a year in the U.S.

"It's one of the great operations of the 20th century," yet good evidence of its effectiveness has been lacking, said Dr. Jeffrey Katz, a joint specialist at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston.

He wrote a commentary that appears with the results in today's New England Journal of Medicine, and said the right choice will be different for each patient, depending on goals, overall health, and whether the person wants to have or avoid surgery.

More than 670,000 total knee replacements are performed annually in the United States, mostly for arthritis, which deteriorates cartilage in the joints.

Medical experts advise trying other things before considering surgery, such as weight loss, physical therapy, exercise and medicines, and many studies show these can help. But for how long is not known, nor are there good comparisons of side effects.

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Researchers in Denmark assigned 100 patients to either 12 weeks of non-surgical treatment -- physical therapy, exercise, diet advice, special insoles and pain medicine -- or surgery followed by 12 weeks of the other treatments.

After one year, the surgery group improved twice as much as the others did on scores for pain, activities of daily living and quality of life.

But two-thirds of those not given surgery still had a meaningful improvement, and only one-fourth of them ended up having surgery within the year.

Complications were more frequent with surgery, including several serious deep vein clots, a fracture and a deep infection.

And other studies show surgery "is not universally successful," and 1 in 5 patients still have some pain six months later, Katz wrote.

Others viewed the results as a clear victory for surgery.

"This certainly adds to the evidence that what we're doing is effective and improves patients' quality of life," said Dr. Joshua Jacobs, a joint surgeon at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago and spokesman for the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.

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