How long does a joint replacement last?

Published on May 9, 2019

It’s a fair question. After all, no one wants to go through the risk, discomfort, and recovery time required for a major operation only to need it again in a short time.

The usual estimate: 10 to 15 years

When I was in medical school, the commonly quoted estimate was that a replaced knee or hip should last about 10 to 15 years, but hopefully much longer. That was an average, of course. Rare complications requiring re-operation can occur soon after surgery; for others, a replaced joint can last two decades or more. And since it takes many years to know whether improved surgical techniques and materials have led to longer joint life, it’s hard to know at any given time how long a replaced joint might last.

Why is this so important? Estimates of joint replacement longevity are helpful to the person who is uncertain about whether joint replacement is worth pursuing. But in addition to whether to have surgery, these numbers can help people decide when to have it done. For example, a person in their 30s might be looking at two or more revisions (the surgeon’s term for replacing a previously replaced joint). Some younger joint replacement surgery candidates have been advised to wait until symptoms are more severe in the hopes of reducing the need for multiple revisions in the future.

A new study provides new estimates

In February 2019, two large analyses were published in the medical journal Lancetregarding the longevity of replaced hips and knees, that included nearly 300,000 total knee replacements and more than 200,000 total hip replacements. They found encouraging results:

  • Nearly 60% of hip replacements lasted 25 years, 70% lasted 20 years, and almost 90% lasted 15 years.
  • Total knee replacements lasted even longer: 82% lasted 25 years, 90% lasted 20 years, and 93% lasted 15 years.

These estimates are quite a bit higher than prior ones and may reflect improvements in surgical technique and materials, general medical care around the time of surgery, or more aggressive mobilization and physical therapy that starts right after surgery. The study authors also suggest that these numbers reflect “real life” patients (including all patients in multiple medical centers who were having their knees or hips replaced), rather than a small number from a single medical center.

Some caveats are worth noting:

  • These surgeries were performed in New Zealand, Australia, Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden. The results might be different in the US or other countries.
  • Detailed information was not available regarding which patients were considered eligible for total joint replacement and which were denied surgery because they were considered at high risk for failure or complications. These factors can affect the success of joint replacement surgery.

Surgery is usually the last (and sometimes best) option

When a hip or knee has worn out and no longer functions as it should, medications, physical therapy, various injections, and other nonsurgical treatments can only do so much — often they can’t do much at all. For those who are healthy enough to have major surgery (and willing to go through with it), total joint replacement is often the only option that offers a good chance at significant pain relief and improved function. Joint replacement surgery for arthritis is considered a treatment of last resort. But even though replaced joints may not last forever, they may last longer than we’d thought.

Source: IlluminAge AgeWise and Harvard Medical School