J Knee Surg 2018; 31(10): 946-951
DOI: 10.1055/s-0038-1672122
Special Focus Section
Thieme Medical Publishers 333 Seventh Avenue, New York, NY 10001, USA.

Albumin, Prealbumin, and Transferrin May Be Predictive of Wound Complications following Total Knee Arthroplasty

Martin Roche
1   Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Holy Cross Orthopedic Institute, Fort Lauderdale, Florida
,
Tsun Yee Law
1   Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Holy Cross Orthopedic Institute, Fort Lauderdale, Florida
,
Jennifer Kurowicki
1   Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Holy Cross Orthopedic Institute, Fort Lauderdale, Florida
2   Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, St. Joesph's Regional Medical Center, Paterson, New Jersey
,
Nipun Sodhi
3   Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Lenox Hill Hospital, New york, New York
,
Samuel Rosas
1   Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Holy Cross Orthopedic Institute, Fort Lauderdale, Florida
4   Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina
,
Leah Elson
5   School of Osteopathic Medicine, Nova Southeastern University, Fort Lauderdale, Florida
,
Spencer Summers
6   Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Rehabilitation, University of Miami Health System, Miami, Florida
,
Karim Sabeh
7   Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical school, Boston MA
,
Michael A. Mont
3   Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Lenox Hill Hospital, New york, New York
› Author Affiliations
Further Information

Publication History

02 April 2018

15 August 2018

Publication Date:
03 October 2018 (online)

Abstract

Nutritional status has become increasingly important in optimizing surgical outcomes and preventing postoperative infection and wound complications. However, currently, there is a paucity in the orthopaedics literature investigating the relationship between nutritional status and wound complications following total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Therefore, the purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of (1) postoperative infections, (2) wound complications, (3) concomitant infection with wound (CoIW) complication, and (4) infection followed by wound complication by using (1) albumin, (2) prealbumin, and (3) transferrin levels as indicators of nutritional status. These four different outcome measures were chosen as they are encountered commonly in daily clinical practice. A retrospective review of a national private payer database for patients who underwent TKA with postoperative infections and wound complications stratified by preoperative serum albumin (normal: 3.5–5 g/dL), prealbumin (normal: 16–35 mg/dL), and transferrin levels (normal: 200–360 mg/dL) between 2007 and 2015 was conducted. Patients were identified by Current Procedural Terminology (CPT), International Classification of Disease, ninth revision (ICD-9) codes, and Logical Observation Identifiers Names and Codes (LOINC). Linear regression was performed to evaluate changes over times. Yearly rates of infection, as well as a correlation and odds ratio analysis of nutritional laboratory values to postoperative complications, were also performed. Our query returned a total of 161,625 TKAs, of which 11,047 (7%) had postoperative wound complications, 18,403 (11%) had infections, 6,296 (34%) had CoIW, and 4,877 (4%) patients with infection developed wound complications. Albumin was the most commonly ordered laboratory test when assessing complications (96%). Wound complications, infections, CoIW, and infection with wound complications after were higher in those below the normal range: albumin <3.5 g/dL (9, 14, 6, and 5%), prealbumin <15 mg/dL (20, 23, 13, and 12%), and transferrin <200 mg/dL (12, 17, 6, and 6%). Preoperative albumin, prealbumin, and transferrin values falling below the normal range represented an increased risk for postoperative complications. Those patients who were in the normal range, however, did not have an increased risk. Therefore, our results suggest that preoperative nutritional optimization can play an important role in reducing the risk for postoperative complications.

 
  • References

  • 1 Nwachukwu BU, McCormick F, Provencher MT, Roche M, Rubash HE. A comprehensive analysis of Medicare trends in utilization and hospital economics for total knee and hip arthroplasty from 2005 to 2011. J Arthroplasty 2015; 30 (01) 15-18
  • 2 Matlock D, Earnest M, Epstein A. Utilization of elective hip and knee arthroplasty by age and payer. Clin Orthop Relat Res 2008; 466 (04) 914-919
  • 3 Peersman G, Laskin R, Davis J, Peterson M. Infection in total knee replacement: a retrospective review of 6489 total knee replacements. Clin Orthop Relat Res 2001; (392) 15-23
  • 4 Jaberi FM, Parvizi J, Haytmanek CT, Joshi A, Purtill J. Procrastination of wound drainage and malnutrition affect the outcome of joint arthroplasty. Clin Orthop Relat Res 2008; 466 (06) 1368-1371
  • 5 Greene KA, Wilde AH, Stulberg BN. Preoperative nutritional status of total joint patients. Relationship to postoperative wound complications. J Arthroplasty 1991; 6 (04) 321-325
  • 6 Guo JJ, Yang H, Qian H, Huang L, Guo Z, Tang T. The effects of different nutritional measurements on delayed wound healing after hip fracture in the elderly. J Surg Res 2010; 159 (01) 503-508
  • 7 Rai J, Gill SS, Kumar BR. The influence of preoperative nutritional status in wound healing after replacement arthroplasty. Orthopedics 2002; 25 (04) 417-421
  • 8 Gherini S, Vaughn BK, Lombardi Jr AV, Mallory TH. Delayed wound healing and nutritional deficiencies after total hip arthroplasty. Clin Orthop Relat Res 1993; (293) 188-195
  • 9 Ghanem E, Heppert V, Spangehl M. , et al. Wound management. J Arthroplasty 2014; 29 (2, Suppl): 84-92
  • 10 Myers WT, Leong M, Phillips LG. Optimizing the patient for surgical treatment of the wound. Clin Plast Surg 2007; 34 (04) 607-620
  • 11 Cross MB, Yi PH, Thomas CF, Garcia J, Della Valle CJ. Evaluation of malnutrition in orthopaedic surgery. J Am Acad Orthop Surg 2014; 22 (03) 193-199
  • 12 Ethridge RT, Leong M, Phillips LG. Wound healing. In: Townsend Jr CM, Beauchamp RD, Evers BM, Mattox KL. , eds. Sabiston Textbook of Surgery: The Biological Basis of Modern Surgical Practice, 20th ed. Philadelphia: Elsevier, Inc.; 2017: 130-162
  • 13 Robson MC, Phillips LG, Lawrence WT. , et al. The safety and effect of topically applied recombinant basic fibroblast growth factor on the healing of chronic pressure sores. Ann Surg 1992; 216 (04) 401-406
  • 14 Daly JM, Reynolds J, Sigal RK, Shou J, Liberman MD. Effect of dietary protein and amino acids on immune function. Crit Care Med 1990; 18 (2, Suppl): S86-S93
  • 15 Walls JD, Abraham D, Nelson CL, Kamath AF, Elkassabany NM, Liu J. Hypoalbuminemia more than morbid obesity is an independent predictor of complications after total hip arthroplasty. J Arthroplasty 2015; 30 (12) 2290-2295
  • 16 Fu MC, D'Ambrosia C, McLawhorn AS, Schairer WW, Padgett DE, Cross MB. Malnutrition increases with obesity and is a stronger independent risk factor for postoperative complications: a propensity-adjusted analysis of total hip arthroplasty patients. J Arthroplasty 2016; 31 (11) 2415-2421
  • 17 Nelson CL, Elkassabany NM, Kamath AF, Liu J. Low albumin levels, more than morbid obesity, are associated with complications after TKA. Clin Orthop Relat Res 2015; 473 (10) 3163-3172
  • 18 Levett DZ, Edwards M, Grocott M, Mythen M. Preparing the patient for surgery to improve outcomes. Best Pract Res Clin Anaesthesiol 2016; 30 (02) 145-157
  • 19 Gunningberg L, Persson C, Åkerfeldt T. , et al. Pre-and postoperative nutritional status and predictors for surgical-wound infections in elective orthopaedic and thoracic patients. Eur J Clin Nutr Metabol 2008; 3: 93-101
  • 20 Huang R, Greenky M, Kerr GJ, Austin MS, Parvizi J. The effect of malnutrition on patients undergoing elective joint arthroplasty. J Arthroplasty 2013; 28 (8, Suppl): 21-24
  • 21 Woon CY, Piponov H, Schwartz BE. , et al. Total knee arthroplasty in obesity: in-hospital outcomes and national trends. J Arthroplasty 2016; 31 (11) 2408-2414
  • 22 Odum SM, Springer BD, Dennos AC, Fehring TK. National obesity trends in total knee arthroplasty. J Arthroplasty 2013; 28 (8, Suppl): 148-151
  • 23 Jacques J. The continuing saga of obesity and malnutrition. Surg Obes Relat Dis 2009; 5 (01) 86-87
  • 24 Golladay GJ, Satpathy J, Jiranek WA. Patient optimization-strategies that work: malnutrition. J Arthroplasty 2016; 31 (08) 1631-1634
  • 25 Zorrilla P, Gómez LA, Salido JA, Silva A, López-Alonso A. Low serum zinc level as a predictive factor of delayed wound healing in total hip replacement. Wound Repair Regen 2006; 14 (02) 119-122
  • 26 Jensen GL, Mirtallo J, Compher C. , et al; International Consensus Guideline Committee. Adult starvation and disease-related malnutrition: a proposal for etiology-based diagnosis in the clinical practice setting from the International Consensus Guideline Committee. JPEN J Parenter Enteral Nutr 2010; 34 (02) 156-159
  • 27 Morey VM, Song YD, Whang JS, Kang YG, Kim TK. Can serum albumin level and total lymphocyte count be surrogates for malnutrition to predict wound complications after total knee arthroplasty?. J Arthroplasty 2016; 31 (06) 1317-1321
  • 28 Bohl DD, Shen MR, Kayupov E, Cvetanovich GL, Della Valle CJ. Is hypoalbuminemia associated with septic failure and acute infection after revision total joint arthroplasty? A study of 4517 patients from the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program. J Arthroplasty 2016; 31 (05) 963-967
  • 29 Bohl DD, Shen MR, Kayupov E, Della Valle CJ. Hypoalbuminemia independently predicts surgical site infection, pneumonia, length of stay, and readmission after total joint arthroplasty. J Arthroplasty 2016; 31 (01) 15-21
  • 30 Aggarwal VK, Tischler EH, Lautenbach C. , et al. Mitigation and education. J Arthroplasty 2014; 29 (2, Suppl): 19-25
  • 31 Marín LA, Salido JA, López A, Silva A. Preoperative nutritional evaluation as a prognostic tool for wound healing. Acta Orthop Scand 2002; 73 (01) 2-5
  • 32 Baer JT. Improving protein and vitamin D status of obese patients participating in physical rehabilitation. Rehabil Nurs 2013; 38 (03) 115-119
  • 33 Eneroth M, Apelqvist J, Larsson J, Persson BM. Improved wound healing in transtibial amputees receiving supplementary nutrition. Int Orthop 1997; 21 (02) 104-108