Extended report
Methotrexate and early postoperative complications in patients
with rheumatoid arthritis undergoing elective orthopaedic surgery
D M Grennan, J Gray, J Loudon, S Fear
Wrightington
Hospital NHS Trust, Hall Lane, Appley Bridge, Wigan WN6 9EP, UK
Correspondence to: Dr Grennan
Accepted for publication 31
July 2000
OBJECTIVES
To
determine whether continued methotrexate treatment increases the risk
of postoperative infections or of surgical complications in patients
with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) within one year of elective orthopaedic surgery.
DESIGN
A prospective
randomised study of postoperative infection or surgical complications
occurring within one year of surgery in patients with RA who underwent
elective orthopaedic surgery.
SUBJECTS
388 patients
with RA who were to undergo elective orthopaedic surgery. Patients who
were receiving methotrexate were randomly allocated to groups who
either continued methotrexate (group A) or who discontinued
methotrexate from two weeks before surgery until two weeks after
surgery (group B). Their complication rates were compared with
complications occurring in 228 patients with RA (group C) who were not
receiving methotrexate and who also underwent elective orthopaedic surgery.
MAIN OUTCOME
MEASURES
Signs of postoperative infection were
recorded, including rubor, discharge, systemic infection, and frequency
of wound dehiscence as well as the incidence of any surgical
complication requiring a secondary revision procedure that occurred
within one year of surgery. The frequencies of flare up activity of RA
at six weeks and six months after surgery were also recorded. A flare
of rheumatoid disease was defined as an increase in joint pain in two
or more joints notified by the patient as well as by an increase in
articular index of at least 25% after surgery.
RESULTS
Signs of
infection or surgical complications occurred in two of 88 procedures in
group A (2%), 11 of 72 procedures in group B (15%), and 24 of 228 (10.5%) procedures in group C. The surgical complication or infection
frequency in group A was less than that in either group B (p<0.003) or
group C (p=0.026). At six weeks after surgery there were no flares in
group A, six flares in group B (8%), and six flares in group C
(2.6%). Logistic regression analysis of the overall surgical
complication rate in all the patients with RA studied showed that
methotrexate, whether continued or discontinued before surgery, did not
increase the early complication rate in the patients with RA who
underwent elective orthopaedic surgery. Other drugs
penicillamine,
indometacin, cyclosporin, hydroxychloroquine, chloroquine, and
prednisolone
all did significantly increase the risk of infection or
surgical complication after elective orthopaedic surgery. The risk of
surgery was also increased in the presence of intercurrent chronic
diseases
diabetes, hypertension, bronchiectasis, psoriasis, asthma,
and ischaemic heart disease.
CONCLUSION
Continuation
of methotrexate treatment does not increase the risk of either
infections or of surgical complications occurring in patients with RA
within one year of elective orthopaedic surgery. Thus methotrexate
treatment should not be stopped in patients whose disease is controlled
by the drug before elective orthopaedic surgery.
© 2001 by Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
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