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Surgery for that problem "probably isn't terribly helpful compared to just medication and physical therapy," said Dr. C. David Geier Jr., a spokesman for the American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine.
He said there may be a misperception that doing arthroscopic surgery on arthritis patients could prevent the need for major knee surgery later.
"This might change that opinion a little bit," Geier said.
Rankin said the studies show arthroscopic surgery benefits patients with milder cases, who have had arthritis symptoms for weeks or months, not years, particularly those with a recent knee injury, and those with a major cartilage tear. It isn't for people with advanced arthritis, who may need a partial or total knee replacement, Rankin said, but many family doctors don't realize this.
In an editorial, Dr. Robert G. Marx of the orthopedic surgery department at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York wrote that treatment decisions must be individualized and that arthroscopic surgery for osteoarthritis has been associated with worse outcomes than therapy. He said it's still appropriate for specific patients where the primary cause of pain isn't osteoarthritis.
"I think everybody should be more cautious about going to surgery," said Dr. Patience White, chief public health officer at the Arthritis Foundation. "We need to understand what is the best approach because the costs are so high."
Many U.S. health insurance plans don't cover arthroscopic knee surgery for people with mild and moderate arthritis, according to Robert Zirkelbach, spokesman for the trade group America's Health Insurance Plans. He said the new findings could lead more health plans to tighten coverage rules.
The Medicare program did so back in 2003, and the number of procedures it paid for plunged 77 percent within three years.
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On the Net: http://www.nejm.org/
Arthritis Foundation: http://www.arthritis.org/
American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons: http://www.aaos.org/
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