Newswise — Although complication and mortality rates following knee replacement surgery have decreased in recent years, 4% of patients receiving the procedure require a revision surgery on the same knee within five years. A new study by a group at Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS) reveals that blacks in the U.S. are at a significantly higher risk of requiring a revision than American whites, and that socioeconomic factors may play an important role in revision risk. The findings could allow clinicians to better predict which patients are more prone to surgical complications and to more effectively counsel their patients.

To conduct the work, the researchers reviewed over 4,000 titles, 106 abstracts, and 24 papers, ultimately identifying four studies from which they could analyze knee replacement revision rates based on race. They found that risk of revision was 38% higher in blacks than whites in the U.S., findings that will be presented on November 9 at the American College of Rheumatology Annual Meeting in San Francisco.

“We know that blacks are less likely to undergo knee replacement surgery than whites, which could be due to a perception that they’re at increased risk of complications,” explains senior study author Anne R. Bass, MD, Associate Attending Physician and Program Director of the HSS Rheumatology Fellowship Program.

It’s been shown that if blacks are candidates for surgery, meaning they have enough pain and x-ray evidence of severe disease, doctors recommend surgery to them at the same rates as whites. “Therefore it’s not an issue of the physician not recommending the surgery, it’s an issue of the patients’ declining the surgery,” says Bass. When U.S. blacks do undergo knee replacement surgery they tend to have more advanced disease and this may be part of the reason they are more prone to complications such as revision.

Bass and her colleagues also looked at three studies that analyzed the same sample of Medicare patients who had undergone a knee replacement. They found that one study hadn’t controlled for whether patients qualified for Medicaid or not – a marker of low socioeconomic status. This study made it look like the risk of revision associated with being black was higher than it really was and pointed out the importance of controlling for socioeconomic factors.

“In the end we did find that there was a higher rate of revision among blacks even when socioeconomic status was controlled for,” says Dr. Bass, “but we also found that socioeconomic status is clearly an important confounder when analyzing revision risk.”

“Black patients may be more likely to have known someone who’s died or had an infection or revision following a knee replacement,” she continues, “so it’s important to discuss these issues with patients who are considering surgery. Physicians also have to be aware of the way in which socioeconomic inequality plays out in the health care system.”

About Hospital for Special SurgeryFounded in 1863, Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS) is a world leader in orthopedics, rheumatology and rehabilitation. HSS is nationally ranked No. 1 in orthopedics, No. 3 in rheumatology and No. 7 in geriatrics by U.S. News & World Report (2015-2016), and is the first hospital in New York State to receive Magnet Recognition for Excellence in Nursing Service from the American Nurses Credentialing Center three consecutive times. HSS has one of the lowest infection rates in the country. HSS is a member of the New York-Presbyterian Healthcare System and an affiliate of Weill Cornell Medical College and as such all Hospital for Special Surgery medical staff are faculty of Weill Cornell. The hospital's research division is internationally recognized as a leader in the investigation of musculoskeletal and autoimmune diseases. Hospital for Special Surgery is located in New York City and online at http://www.hss.edu.