Summary
There is currently no consensus on the appropriate sports and occupational restrictions for military service members with a joint replacement. Data from the United States show that 14% of military patients complete an operational deployment after the index surgery. No published data are available on arthroplasty in the militaries of other North Atlantic Treaty Organization countries. Research is needed to determine the appropriate medical employment limitations for Canadian Armed Forces members with a knee or hip replacement. Service members wanting to continue military service should be carefully screened to ensure that their duties do not compromise the longevity of the implant and that the risk of mission-threatening complications is minimal.
Joint replacements are common surgical procedures for end-stage degenerative joint disease. They provide almost complete relief of symptoms and substantially improve quality of life.1 Approximately 130 000 joint replacements are performed annually in Canada, most of which are total knee (TKA) and total hip arthroplasties (THA).2 Although more common in older adults, approximately 8.5% are performed in patients younger than 55 years of age. Both THA and TKA are susceptible to complications including periprosthetic fractures, dislocation and aseptic loosening.2 Many surgeons recommend against high-impact activities following the procedure to avoid complications and extend the life of the implant.3–6 These restrictions can be particularly difficult to enforce in younger patients who demand active lifestyles. Activity recommendations are possibly becoming more liberal, perhaps because of greater surgeon confidence in modern implants.7,8 Osteoarthritis, the indication for the vast majority of joint replacements, is frequent in military members and veterans because of the rigors of military service and as a consequence of extremity war injuries.9,10 Therefore, joint replacements are relatively common in military patients. This raises difficult questions concerning the appropriate sports and occupational restrictions for service members who have undergone THA or TKA.
Several studies provide insights into joint replacements in the United States Armed Forces. Jorgensen and colleagues described a series of 183 hip replacements performed on US Army service members between 2004 and 2010.11 At a minimum of 2 years postoperatively, 31% were still on active duty, 24% had been medically separated and 45% had retired. Twenty-six patients completed an operational deployment after the surgical procedure. In this group, 4 patients reported hip pain during the deployment and another required the drainage of a subcutaneous abscess and was subsequently diagnosed with a deep infection. Belmont and colleagues reported on 159 US Army soldiers on active duty who underwent total knee replacement between 2007 and 2012.12 At an average follow-up of 4 years, 18% had been medically separated and the rest had retired or finished their duty commitment. Twenty patients completed an operational deployment, including 2 with bilateral knee replacements. Aside from knee pain, reported by 2 patients, there were no complications during these deployments. A separate study focused on the outcome of deployments in 45 US service members who had undergone a hip or a knee replacement by a single surgeon between 2005 and 2008.13 Sixteen patients completed an operational deployment at an average of 21 months postoperatively. No complications occurred, but the majority of patients reported limitations with sprinting and loaded marches. Discomfort while sitting in military vehicles or aircraft was also frequent. Finally, Daniele and colleagues performed the most comprehensive analysis of joint replacements in US service members.14 From 2004 to 2014, 3805 military patients underwent at least 1 joint replacement procedure. The overall incidence of joint replacement was 2.43 per 10 000 persons-years. Hip and knee arthroplasty were the most frequent procedures, with an incidence of 1.08 and 1.16 per 10 000 person-years, respectively. The incidence of arthroplasty increased significantly during the study period. As expected, service members older than 45 years of age were disproportionately affected, with an incidence reaching 26.3 per 10 000 person-years in this group. Two years after surgery, 51% of patients with a hip arthroplasty and 42% of patients with a knee arthroplasty were still serving. Fourteen percent of all patients were deployed with the prosthetic joint. These reports show that a substantial percentage of patients are able to continue their military duties and a complete operational deployment after a hip or knee replacement.
Differences in occupational, medical and fitness standards make it challenging to extrapolate these results to militaries in other North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) countries. In the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF), the Universality of Service principle requires that all members be capable of safely performing 6 general military tasks: an escape to cover, the extrication of a casualty from a vehicle, picking and digging, the construction of a sandbag fortification, carrying a stretcher, and carrying pickets and wire.15,16 For most CAF members, the FORCE test is used annually as a surrogate for these tasks.17 The test includes 20 m sprints, a sandbag drag, loaded shuttles and dynamic sandbag lifts.18 In addition to annual fitness testing, many military members perform strenuous physical work under austere conditions. Therefore, a risk analysis is required to determine if individuals can reasonably continue military service after a joint replacement. An estimate of the baseline risk for CAF members, who can serve until age 60, is provided by the revision rates for patients younger than 55 published by national joint replacement registries. In this age category, the Canadian Joint Replacement Registry reports a cumulative 5-year THA revision rate of 2.4% in men and 3.1% in women.2 For TKA, the 5-year revision rates are 6.5% for men and 5% for women.2 The United Kingdom’s National Joint Registry estimates 10-year revision rates of less than 9% for hip replacements and less than 11% for knee replacements in patients younger than 55 years of age.19 The Australian National Joint Replacement Registry reports 10-year revision rates of 5.9% for THA and 10.5% for TKA.20 In addition, there is a small risk of complications that do not require revision, such as hip dislocations treated with a closed reduction and fractures treated with internal fixation. 21–23 The additional risk that CAF members would incur from annual fitness testing, deployments and general duties is difficult to estimate.
The CAF and NATO use risk matrices to assess the fitness of military members for expeditions based on the probability of exacerbations (complications), their consequences for the patient and the resulting risk to the mission. 24,25 This methodology should be applied to TKA and THA by a panel of civilian arthroplasty experts and military orthopedic surgeons. In addition, a multidisciplinary research effort is needed to address key knowledge gaps, including the epidemiology of joint replacements in the CAF, the occupational outcome of retained service members, the risks of physical fitness testing and the long-term outcome of joint replacements in veterans. Joint replacements in military members are becoming increasingly common; subject matter experts must be actively involved to generate evidence-based policy recommendations. In the interim, selected CAF members may be able to serve with a joint replacement if they have a low risk of mission-threatening complications and if their duties do not unduly compromise the long-term survival of the implant.
Footnotes
Competing interests: None declared.
Disclaimer: This article reflects the personal views of the author. It does not represent the official policy of the Department of National Defence, the Canadian Armed Forces, or the Royal Canadian Medical Service.
- Accepted December 5, 2019.