Abstract

Knee arthropathy is a frequent complication affecting hemophilic patients, which can cause severe pain and disability. When conservative measures fail, total knee arthroplasty (TKA) may be performed. Eighteen TKA were performed in 15 patients with hemophilia during a 24-year period in a Hemophilia Comprehensive Care Center. All patients were evaluated by a multidisciplinary team constituted by a hematologist, an orthopedic surgeon, and a physical medicine and rehabilitation physician. Mean follow-up was 11.3 years. Ten-year survival rate with prosthesis removal as end point was 94.3%. At last, follow-up visual analog pain scale score was 3.2 points, knee osteoarthritis outcome scale was 86.7 points, and mean range of motion was 88°. Only two patients required perioperative transfusion. Complication rate was 27.8% and included two infections, two prosthesis stiffness, and one case of recurrent hemarthrosis. After appropriate medical optimization and with prompt rehabilitation, TKA can be performed in hemophilic patients with good clinical results and survivor rates comparable to nonhemophilic patients.

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