Below is a letter to the editor from AANA that is being sent out to the national media this week. It sums the whole issue up nicely.
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A medical article published in the July 11, 2002 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine has captured the fantasy of the media. This study addressed the use of arthroscopic surgical techniques for the treatment of arthritis of the knee. The assumption made by the authors of the article as well as the media is that arthroscopic surgery is useless in the management of arthritis of the knee joint. Dozens of newspaper articles and television reports have focused on this study.
The casual reader of these articles might think that arthroscopic surgery is useless for any type of knee surgery involving arthritis. This is most unfortunate, particularly in view of the fact that arthroscopic surgery now has the well deserved reputation of being the gold standard for surgical care of the knee. For years those of us entrusted with the teaching of arthroscopic surgery to our peers have stressed the importance of a careful evaluation of our patients before considering surgery. When arthritis is a component of the problem in the knee, it is well recognized that arthroscopic techniques have limitations. When it is obvious by x-rays and physical examination that arthritis in the knee is advanced, arthroscopy should not be considered. If there is a narrowed joint space on x-ray, with no mechanical symptoms, arthroscopy offers the patient no chance of relief. This has been understood for years and has been taught to those learning the technique. In other words, patient selection is important. The authors of the article in the New England Journal of Medicine do not emphasize patient selection criteria, and actually had a pre-selection bias that was not fully discussed. With proper selection, patients with early degenerative arthritis and mechanical symptoms of locking or catching can derive significant benefit from arthroscopic surgery. Many well-controlled scientific studies have proven this point.
No responsible orthopaedic surgeon doing primarily arthroscopic surgery will claim that arthroscopic surgery is of benefit to all patients with arthritis of the knee. That would be clearly untrue and inappropriate. It is just as inappropriate to state that arthroscopic surgery is useless in any case of arthritis. It is shameful that responsible people would convey this impression to the public. Certainly, doctors should carefully evaluate their patients and select the most appropriate treatment plan based on established criteria that predict the best chance of relief. In many cases, this includes non-surgical management. In other cases, it may be the performance of a total knee replacement. There is however a sub-group of patients with knee arthritis that can be significantly helped with appropriate arthroscopic surgery.
Years of earned trust from the public regarding arthroscopic surgery can be threatened by incomplete or irresponsible reporting. This single article, while appropriate in some aspects of its scientific approach, is nonetheless flawed in several critical scientific respects.
The public – our patients – must be reassured that, in the hands of the conscientious orthopaedic surgeon familiar with the patient selection criteria for degenerative arthritis, arthroscopic surgery can be a dependable procedure, capable of producing long-lasting relief.
Stephen S. Burkhart, M.D., President
Arthroscopy Association of North America
J. Whit Ewing, M.D., Executive Vice President
Arthroscopy Association of North America