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Socio-professional Categories and Return to Work After Hip or Knee Replacement Surgery

Socio-professional Categories and Return to Work After Hip or Knee Replacement Surgery

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04262908
Acronym
ARRET-Pro
Enrollment
300
Registered
2020-02-10
Start date
2020-02-10
Completion date
2025-09-30
Last updated
2023-03-23

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Hip Arthropathy Associated With Other Conditions

Brief summary

A significant proportion of patients (15 to 45%) who have benefited from a total hip or knee replacement surgery (THKA), are put on sick leave (SL). This SL allows these patients who had a professional activity at the time of the intervention (age \<65 years) to enhance the healing, improve the quality of life and ensure a functional return to work. The number of patients returning to work and the time taken to return to work after the intervention are d depending on the intervention (hip or knee) and are linked to socio-demographic factors, to the patient's general condition (comorbidity, presence of other arthritis joints…) and the type of professional activity. Studies evaluating the impact of the type of professional activity on the return to work after THKA are nonexistent in France, rare in the literature, mostly retrospective and methodologically weak. In addition, the individual and socioeconomic impact of the cessation of work after an THKA, the absence of national data assessing the predictive nature of socio-professional categories on the return to work using a multivariate analysis motivated us to set up this study.

Detailed description

The data usually collected in the medical file will be collected as part of the preoperative and 3 months postoperative study. As part of this study, a phone call will be made to contact patients who have had a prolonged SL The data collected are as follows: During hospitalization Socio-demographic data: sex, age, title of the profession, the joint concerned, family situation, place of life, postoperative availability of a caregiver or home help if necessary. Clinical data: Comorbidities, weight, height, date of the arthroplasty, per and or postoperative complications of the arthroplasty, date of prescribed work stoppage 3 months postoperative: medical consultation Date of the 3-month consultation, date and method of resumption of work, if applicable, otherwise the duration of the extension of the duration of the SL, the doctor prescribing the extension and the causal link of this extension to the arthroplasty 4 months postoperative: telephone call This phone call will relate to patients whose work stoppage has been extended. Will be collected, the date and the mode of resumption of work, if not the cause of not resumed. For patients whose prolongation of SL has been prescribed by the attending physician, the doctor of the rehabilitation center (knee prostheses) or by the occupational physician, the latter will be contacted by telephone to collect the reason for prolongation of the TA.

Interventions

Patients who did not return to work after the SL prescribed initially and had an extension of the SL will be called at 4 months postoperatively to collect infomation

Sponsors

Groupe Hospitalier Diaconesses Croix Saint-Simon
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Observational model
COHORT
Time perspective
PROSPECTIVE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 65 Years

Inclusion criteria

* Information of the patient and obtaining his non-opposition * Men and women aged ≥ 18 and ≤ 65 and in full-time or part-time paid or voluntary professional activity before the intervention or before the work stoppage justified by the planned arthroplasty * Patients consulting our orthopedic surgery department for the first implantation of a hip or knee prosthesis following arthritis

Exclusion criteria

* The patient expresses his opposition to the use of his personal data * Patient\> 65 years' old * Arthroplasty on septic arthritis * Presence of another hip or knee prosthesis already implanted * Radiological stage 4 of osteoarthritis of the knee or hip not operated * ASA \> 3 * Proven depression or patient under antidepressant treatment * Bipolarity, psychosis and neuroleptic treatment * Retired patient * Patient on sick leave ≥ 1 month before the intervention

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Identification of socio-professional categories according to the PCS-ESE 2017 classification which would influence the return to work.Through study completion, an average of 21 monthsTo respond to the main objective of the study, investigator will collect ○ socio-demographic data during the anamnesis (sex, profession, joint concerned (hip, knee), family situation, place of life, presence of caregiver, co-morbidities, presence of other joint prostheses. * Clinical data (weight, height, musculoskeletal examination for other arthritis joints) * Data during hospitalization (date of surgery, intraoperative or postoperative complications (dislocation of prosthesis, bone or prosthesis stem fracture, hematoma, prosthesis infection) * Data concerning the work stoppage at 3 months during the usual follow-up consultation and by telephone as part of the study intervention about patients who have had a work stoppage extension (date of stoppage of work, date of resumption of work and mode of resumption, duration of extension of the SL, etc)

Countries

France

Contacts

Primary ContactWilfrid GRAFF, MD
wgraff@hopital-dcss.org003344641640
Backup ContactYounes KERROUMI, MD
ykerroumi@hopital-dcss.org003344643384

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026