PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Around 160,000 joint replacement surgeries lost by COVID-19 pandemic, study finds

2024-08-01
(Press-News.org) Nearly nine months of joint replacement surgery has been lost - around 160,000 fewer operations –  since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, a new study led by the University of Bristol has found.  The research suggests returning to pre-pandemic levels will not tackle the backlog, and even with rapid expansion, it will take many years, if not decades, to fix this joint replacement crisis.

The study, published in The Bone & Joint Journal today [1 August], looked in detail at the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on the numbers of joint (hip, knee, shoulder, elbow, and ankle) replacement surgery carried out in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland.

The researchers analysed National Joint Registry (NJR) data between January 2019 and December 2022 inclusive, which includes all NHS and privately funded hip, knee, shoulder, elbow, and ankle replacement operations.

The study compared the period including and after the pandemic (2020 to 2022 inclusive) to how many operations would have been performed had surgery continued at the same level as 2019.

The research team found by the end of 2022 almost three quarters of a year of planned operations - 71.6 per cent of 2019 activity and 158,994 joint replacements - had been lost. This gap continues to increase and therefore the recovery from this deficit does not appear to have started.  Knee, shoulder, and ankle surgery have been affected more severely than hip and elbow surgery.

The NHS has been more impacted than the private sector. By 2022, NHS activity was still only 73.2 per cent of 2019 levels, whereas operations in the private sector had increased to 126.8 per cent of 2019 levels. The private sector is now the main provider of joint replacements (53 per cent in 2022) in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland.

Wales and Northern Ireland have been worse affected than England. Both countries recorded a backlog of more than a year’s worth of operations between 2020-2022; 136 per cent of 2019 for Wales and 121.3 per cent for Northern Ireland, whereas the deficit in England was 66.7 per cent.

Jonathan French, Clinical Research Fellow in the Bristol Medical School: Translational Health Science (THS), and corresponding author, said: “Patients awaiting different types of joint replacement surgery in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland have been affected disproportionately, and recovery to pre-pandemic levels will be challenging. This will inevitably lead to many patients enduring unnecessary pain, disability and wider decline in mental and physical wellbeing.”

Michael Whitehouse, Professor of Trauma and Orthopaedics in the Bristol Medical School: THS, and senior clinical lead for the paper, explained: “If capacity was immediately expanded by five per cent on top of 2019 levels it would take until 2040 to address the backlog.  An immediate ten per cent expansion, if possible, would still take until 2031 to catch up. This represents a severe challenge that is currently underestimated in planning and provision that requires prioritisation to mitigate the impact of debilitating joint related conditions on patients.”

Tim Wilton, Medical Director of the NJR, added: “The value of the volume data held by the NJR is that we can glean an accurate insight into the longer-term impact of COVID on the supply and demand and provision of surgical orthopaedic services. There is a clear need to plan and adjust service volumes based on this insight and research, so that patient waiting list numbers start to reduce across the different joints. These data, being based against the volume of cases done in 2019, are likely to be an underestimate of the catching-up required as the volume of cases was growing every year before 2019 rather than being static.”

Joint replacement surgery is a common and very effective surgical procedure used to treat a variety of musculoskeletal problems including osteoarthritis and acute trauma.  Joint replacements are long-lasting, with over half of hip and knee replacements lasting over 25 years, and 90 per cent of shoulder replacements lasting over ten years.

The research team would like to thank the patients and staff of all the hospitals in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland who have contributed data to the NJR, along with the Healthcare Quality Improvement Partnership, the NJR Research Committee, and staff at the NJR for facilitating the research.

The study was supported by the National Institute for Health and Care Research Bristol Biomedical Research Centre (NIHR Bristol BRC), Orthopaedic Research UK (ORUK) and the British Hip Society (BHS).

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Public health measures that reduce dementia risk could save up to £4bn

2024-07-31
Public health interventions that tackle dementia risk factors could yield as much as £4bn in savings in England by reducing dementia rates and helping people to live longer and healthier, finds a new study led by UCL researchers. The study, published in The Lancet Healthy Longevity, shows that interventions – such as reformulating food products to reduce sugar and salt intake, introducing low emission zones to improve air quality in cities, and minimum alcohol unit pricing to reduce drinking – could have extensive benefits beyond just the health outcomes they are directly targeting. Lead author Dr Naaheed Mukadam (UCL Psychiatry) ...

The Lancet: Nearly half of dementia cases could be prevented or delayed by tackling 14 risk factors starting in childhood, including two new risks—high cholesterol and vision loss

2024-07-31
Vision loss and high cholesterol add to 12 previously identified modifiable risk factors for dementia, concludes a new report from the 2024 Lancet Commission. The potential to prevent and better manage dementia is high if action to tackle these risk factors begins in childhood and continues throughout life, even in individuals with high genetic risk for dementia. New report outlines 13 recommendations for individuals and governments to help reduce risk, including preventing and treating hearing loss, vision loss, and depression; being cognitively active ...

Precision oncology via artificial intelligence on cancer biopsies

Precision oncology via artificial intelligence on cancer biopsies
2024-07-31
A new generation of artificial intelligence (AI) tools designed to allow rapid, low-cost detection of clinically actionable genomic alterations directly from tumor biopsy slides has been developed by a team led by engineers and medical researchers at University of California San Diego. A paper describing the new AI protocol for examining routine biopsies, called DeepHRD, was recently published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. Senior author Ludmil Alexandrov, Ph.D., professor of bioengineering and professor of cellular and molecular medicine at UC San Diego, says the new method is designed to save weeks and thousands of dollars from clinical oncology treatment workflows ...

What you don't know about endometrial cancer could kill you

2024-07-31
CLEVELAND, Ohio (July 31, 2024)—Despite the fact that endometrial cancer is the most common cancer of the female reproductive organs, a significant percentage of women do not know that postmenopausal bleeding is a key warning sign of the disease. Worse, even fewer women report having received any type of counseling on the subject from their healthcare professionals. That’s according to a new study published online today in Menopause, the journal of The Menopause Society. It is estimated that 67,880 new cases of ...

Does it matter that the ovaries are the most rapidly aging organs in the female body?

2024-07-31
CLEVELAND, Ohio (August 1, 2024)—Because of the aging of the ovaries, a woman’s fertility gradually declines, and she eventually enters menopause. The onset of menopause puts women at a significantly higher risk of various diseases such as cardiovascular disease and osteoporosis. A new study suggests that a shorter reproductive lifespan is linked with a higher risk of multimorbidity. Results of the survey are published online today in Menopause, the journal of The Menopause Society. The effect of reproductive-related factors on women’s health has become a focus of interest and study in recent years. Previous studies have identified the ...

Serotonin uptake regulates ependymoma tumor growth

Serotonin uptake regulates ependymoma tumor growth
2024-07-31
(MEMPHIS, Tenn. – July 31, 2024) Do neurons play a role in brain tumor growth and development? Scientists at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital and Baylor College of Medicine have evidence showing that, for childhood ependymomas, they do. There are no targeted therapies available to treat ependymoma due in large part to a lack of understanding of the tumor microenvironment. By leveraging a recently developed murine model, scientists explored the interaction between ependymoma cells and surrounding neurons. They found that hyperactivation of a specific subset ...

Scientists set sail to study Greenland glaciers from underwater

Scientists set sail to study Greenland glaciers from underwater
2024-07-31
The University of Texas at Austin has embarked on a mission to explore the underwater edges of Greenland’s coastal glaciers to learn more about future sea level rise.  The four-week expedition conducted with international partners will investigate processes that control how these giant glaciers melt and what that means for the future of the Greenland ice sheet, which has about 23 feet (7 meters) of potential sea level rise locked away in its ice.  Joining the researchers is a robotic submersible that will gather measurements of the glaciers’ underwater walls and sediment-laden meltwater, a feat that’s never been ...

Smell reports reveal the need to expand urban air quality monitoring, say UBC researchers

2024-07-31
Ever wondered if your neighbourhood odour could be impacting your health? University of British Columbia researchers have uncovered surprising insights into the Vancouver region's “smellscape” using data from the Smell Vancouver app. Analyzing 549 reports from one year of app data, they discovered that “rotten” and “chemical” odours dominated, making up about 65 per cent of submissions. These unpleasant smells were linked to self-reported health issues like headaches and anxiety, leading some residents to change their behaviours, like closing windows even in stifling-hot weather. “The ...

Type 1 diabetes: UAB startup gains FDA clearance to test novel oral drug

Type 1 diabetes: UAB startup gains FDA clearance to test novel oral drug
2024-07-31
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – The University of Alabama at Birmingham startup TIXiMED, Inc., has obtained clearance from the United States Food and Drug Administration to proceed to clinical trials under an Investigational New Drug for TIX100, its novel oral Type 1 diabetes drug. This represents a major milestone in the development of this new approach to T1D treatment and gives TIXiMED the green light to start human studies with TIX100. The development of TIX100 is based on decades of research by Anath Shalev, M.D., the Nancy R. and Eugene C. Gwaltney Family Endowed Chair in Juvenile Diabetes Research in the UAB Division ...

Can this device prevent a stroke during a heart valve operation? New research shows potential benefit

2024-07-31
Recently published research shows a medical device may be beneficial for patients who have previously had a stroke and are planning to undergo a transcatheter aortic valve replacement, a type of heart valve operation.  Neel Butala, MD, an assistant professor in the Division of Cardiology at the University of Colorado Department of Medicine, is the first author of the article, which was presented as a late-breaking clinical trial at the New York Valves 2024 conference and simultaneously published in Circulation: Cardiovascular Interventions, an American Heart Association journal.    The ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Melanoma incidence and mortality trends in Sweden

Breaking the trend: Skin cancer incidence in young adults declines

ChatGPT outperformed trainee doctors in assessing complex respiratory illness in children

Night owls are more likely to develop type 2 diabetes – and it’s not just because of an unhealthy lifestyle, Dutch study finds

Air travel may affect insulin pump delivery in people with type 1 diabetes

Fruit and oats raise risk of type 1 diabetes but berries provide protection, research suggests

Patients receiving steroids are more than twice as likely to develop diabetes, UK study has found

Perioperative nivolumab may provide meaningful improvement in event-free survival compared to only neoadjuvant nivolumab plus chemotherapy for resectable NSCLC

PanCan nodule management protocol more effective than LungRADSv1.1 method

Normalized membrane ratio of TROP2 by quantitative continuous scoring predictive of clinical outcomes in TROPION-Lung 01

Ivonescimab outperforms pembrolizumab in phase 3 study for first-line treatment of PD-L1-positive advanced NSCLC in HARMONi-2 study

NeoCOAST-2 Data shows combination of Durvalumab with novel agents increases pathological responses in resectable NSCLC -- Data builds on AEGEAN study research

Immunotherapy before and after lung cancer surgery reduces death risk, disease recurrence

Young vapers perform worse in exercise testing

Medical clowns shorten hospital stays for children with pneumonia

New report finds the changing nature of work provides new opportunities for workplace gender equality

Insulin resistance is linked to over 30 diseases – and to early death in women, study of people in the UK finds

Innovative semaglutide hydrogel could reduce diabetes shots to once a month

Weight loss could reduce the risk of severe infections in people with diabetes, UK research suggests

Long-term exposure to air pollution and a lack of green space increases the risk of hospitalization for respiratory conditions

Better cardiovascular health in early pregnancy may offset high genetic risk

Artificial intelligence method transforms gene mutation prediction in lung cancer: DeepGEM data releases at IASLC 2024 World Conference on Lung Cancer

Antibody–drug conjugate I-DXd shows clinically meaningful response in patients with extensive-stage small cell lung cancer

IASLC Global Survey on biomarker testing reveals progress and persistent barriers in lung cancer biomarker testing

Research shows pathway to developing predictive biomarkers for immune checkpoint inhibitors

Just how dangerous is Great Salt Lake dust? New research looks for clues

Maroulas appointed Associate Vice Chancellor, Director of AI Tennessee

New chickadee research finds cognitive skills impact lifespan

Cognitive behavioral therapy enhances brain circuits to relieve depression

Terasaki Institute awarded $2.3 Million grant from NIH for organ transplantation research using organs-on-a-chip technology

[Press-News.org] Around 160,000 joint replacement surgeries lost by COVID-19 pandemic, study finds