National Joint Registry recorded untoward intraoperative events during primary total hip arthroplasty: an investigation into the data accuracy, causal mechanisms and attributability

Author:

Singhal R1,Leong JW1,Rajpura A1,Porter ML1,Board TN1

Affiliation:

1. Wrightington Wigan and Leigh Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, UK

Abstract

Introduction Untoward intraoperative events occurring during total hip arthroplasty are recorded by the National Joint Registry through Minimum Data Set (MDS) forms. This data may be used to assess the safety of implants. The aim of this study is to evaluate the accuracy of the untoward intraoperative events, assess the mechanism and ascertain whether these events were attributable to the implants inserted. Methods A retrospective analysis was undertaken of primary total hip arthroplasties performed between 2005 and 2018 in which an untoward intraoperative event was recorded. Results Of 12,802 primary hip replacements, 64 patients (0.5%) had untoward intraoperative events recorded on the MDS form. In 43 of 64 cases, the intraoperative untoward event recorded on the MDS form matched the operation notes. Among these 43 cases, in 30 (69%) patients the intraoperative event could be attributed to the implant recorded. In the remaining 13 (31%) cases, the events recorded could not be attributed to the implant. In six cases, the untoward events were attributed to implants used to manage the events rather than the implants which caused them. In seven cases, the untoward events were related to surgical technique rather than to the implant or instrumentation. Conclusions Our analysis highlights that all untoward intraoperative events recorded on the NJR form are not implant related or attributable to the implant inserted. Provision should be made on the MDS form to clarify whether a particular untoward intraoperative event was related to the implant inserted.

Publisher

Royal College of Surgeons of England

Subject

General Medicine,Surgery

Reference14 articles.

1. National Joint Registry. 17th Annual report 2020. https://reports.njrcentre.org.uk/Portals/0/PDFdownloads/NJR%2017th%20Annual%20Report%202020.pdf

2. National Joint Registry. Reported untoward intra-operative events for primary hip replacement patients. https://reports.njrcentre.org.uk/hips-primary-procedures-surgical-technique/H14v1NJR?reportid=6526869F-3E64-435B-B5BC-3800F2F447BE&defaults=DC__Reporting_Period__Date_Range=%22MAX%22,J__Filter__Calendar_Year=%22MAX%22,H__Filter__Joint=%22Hip%22.

3. Impact of hip arthroplasty registers on orthopaedic practice and perspectives for the future

4. Beyond Compliance. Tracking your recovery. www.beyondcompliance.org.uk

5. The role of national registries in improving patient safety for hip and knee replacements

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