Testing artificial hip and knee joints ‘will save the NHS £200 million a year’

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Testing artificial hip and knee joints ‘will save the NHS £200 million a year’… and reduce unnecessary pain for patients in future

Artificial hip and knee joints that have to be removed after failing early are to be examined routinely to save the NHS £200million a year – and reduce unnecessary pain for patients in future.

Less than one in 100 removed implants are examined to see why they failed, so surgeons don’t learn what went wrong or pick up on potential scandals.

Consultant orthopaedic surgeon Raghavendra Sidaginamale, of North Tees and Hartlepool NHS Trust, said: ‘Most removed implants are put in the bin. A wealth of information goes down the drain.’

Less than one in 100 removed implants are examined to see why they failed, so surgeons don’t learn what went wrong or pick up on potential scandals

Now the NHS is setting up an Implants Analysis Service, enabling hospitals to send them off to be analysed for signs of unusual wear or chemical degradation

Now the NHS is setting up an Implants Analysis Service, enabling hospitals to send them off to be analysed for signs of unusual wear or chemical degradation

Now the NHS is setting up an Implants Analysis Service, enabling hospitals to send them off to be analysed for signs of unusual wear or chemical degradation.

Each year, 15,000 hip and knee replacements are replaced. If this happens within ten years, they are deemed to have failed early. Jason Wilson, of the IAS, said they are ‘like a black box flight recorder in a plane’, adding: ‘They hold a wealth of information we can learn from.’

The annual cost of replacing early failures is £100million. Legal cases related to failed orthopaedic devices costs £181million a year. The NHS hopes the IAS will prevent £200million of those costs.