The global demand for end-stage hip and knee osteoarthritis surgical treatment is rising, as is the need of optimal postoperative rehabilitation. Patient stratification is key to provide rehabilitation professionals and policy makers with real-life data in support of early discharge planning and continuous care provision. The aim of this retrospective, observational study was to investigate which factors can predict the burden of care at discharge (BCD) and the inpatient rehabilitation length of stay (LOS) based on a set of demographic, societal, clinical and organizational data collected from a high-volume orthopedic hospital. We included 45.306 variables from 1678 patients. All variables were initially tested individually using a linear regression model for inpatient rehabilitation LOS and a logistic regression model for BCD. Variables that resulted significant (p < 0.05) were subsequently considered in a single, comprehensive linear regression model, or a single, logistic regression model, respectively. Age, living with a family, occupational status, baseline Barthel Index and duration of surgery were predictors of inpatient rehabilitation LOS and BCD. Sex, primary or secondary osteoarthritis, American Society of Anesthesiologists score, body mass index, transfusion, biological risk, type of anesthesia, day of surgery, numeric pain rating scale and baseline cognitive function at baseline were not. Including specific patient comorbidities, surgical access technique and chronic use of pharmacological therapy can improve the predictive power of the model.

Predictive Factors of Inpatient Rehabilitation Stay and Post-Discharge Burden of Care After Joint Replacement for Hip and Knee Osteoarthritis: A Retrospective Study on 1678 Patients / F. Pennestri, V. Tosto, C. Pelosi, D. Grippa, S. Negrini, C. Kiekens, E. Sarasso, G. Banfi, C. Cordani. - In: APPLIED SCIENCES. - ISSN 2076-3417. - 14:24(2024 Dec 21), pp. 11993.1-11993.12. [10.3390/app142411993]

Predictive Factors of Inpatient Rehabilitation Stay and Post-Discharge Burden of Care After Joint Replacement for Hip and Knee Osteoarthritis: A Retrospective Study on 1678 Patients

S. Negrini;C. Cordani
Ultimo
2024

Abstract

The global demand for end-stage hip and knee osteoarthritis surgical treatment is rising, as is the need of optimal postoperative rehabilitation. Patient stratification is key to provide rehabilitation professionals and policy makers with real-life data in support of early discharge planning and continuous care provision. The aim of this retrospective, observational study was to investigate which factors can predict the burden of care at discharge (BCD) and the inpatient rehabilitation length of stay (LOS) based on a set of demographic, societal, clinical and organizational data collected from a high-volume orthopedic hospital. We included 45.306 variables from 1678 patients. All variables were initially tested individually using a linear regression model for inpatient rehabilitation LOS and a logistic regression model for BCD. Variables that resulted significant (p < 0.05) were subsequently considered in a single, comprehensive linear regression model, or a single, logistic regression model, respectively. Age, living with a family, occupational status, baseline Barthel Index and duration of surgery were predictors of inpatient rehabilitation LOS and BCD. Sex, primary or secondary osteoarthritis, American Society of Anesthesiologists score, body mass index, transfusion, biological risk, type of anesthesia, day of surgery, numeric pain rating scale and baseline cognitive function at baseline were not. Including specific patient comorbidities, surgical access technique and chronic use of pharmacological therapy can improve the predictive power of the model.
No
English
aging; arthroplasty; continuity of care; inpatients; osteoarthritis; population health management; rehabilitation
Settore MEDS-19/A - Malattie dell'apparato locomotore
Settore MEDS-19/B - Medicina fisica e riabilitativa
Settore MEDS-26/C - Scienze delle professioni sanitarie della riabilitazione
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
   Personalized rehabilitation via novel ai patient stratification stategies (PREPARE)
   PREPARE
   EUROPEAN COMMISSION
   101080288
21-dic-2024
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)
14
24
11993
1
12
12
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
  
scopus
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Predictive Factors of Inpatient Rehabilitation Stay and Post-Discharge Burden of Care After Joint Replacement for Hip and Knee Osteoarthritis: A Retrospective Study on 1678 Patients / F. Pennestri, V. Tosto, C. Pelosi, D. Grippa, S. Negrini, C. Kiekens, E. Sarasso, G. Banfi, C. Cordani. - In: APPLIED SCIENCES. - ISSN 2076-3417. - 14:24(2024 Dec 21), pp. 11993.1-11993.12. [10.3390/app142411993]
open
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
9
262
Article (author)
Periodico con Impact Factor
F. Pennestri, V. Tosto, C. Pelosi, D. Grippa, S. Negrini, C. Kiekens, E. Sarasso, G. Banfi, C. Cordani
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1134675
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