Background: The relationship between operative times and patient outcomes in total hip arthroplasty (THA) has not been well defined.
Methods: From January 2016 to December 2019, data were prospectively collected for THA patients in the FORCE-TJR registry and hospital EMR of an academic total-joint center.
Results: 1,123 patients were included. Operative times ranged from 36 to 366 minutes, with a mean operative time of 111.26+/-31.37 minutes. Unadjusted GLM showed HOOS pain, ADL, and QoL scores differed across operative times, with patients who had operative times between 106 and 120 minutes having significantly lower pain, higher function, and better quality of life at 12 months, especially compared to patients with operative times < 90 minutes. Patients who had operative times between 106 and 120 minutes had significantly better VR-12 PCS and MCS at 12 months. Although statistically significant, differences were small and did not persist after controlling for within-surgeon effects, patient socio-demographics and baseline patient-reported outcomes, suggesting that patient characteristics or within-surgeon effects may play a more significant role in these patient-reported outcomes than operative time.
Conclusion: This study showed that among THA patients, operative times were significantly associated with patient-reported outcomes at 12 months post-operatively, but is one of many surgeon and patient-related factors with effect on THA outcome.
Keywords: FORCE-TJR; Operative Time; PROM; THA; Total Hip Arthroplasty.