Same-Day Joint Replacement & Enhanced Recovery
- Outpatient (same-day) and rapid-recovery arthroplasty mean discharging hip and knee replacement patients on the DAY of surgery (or within 23 hours), enabled by ENHANCED RECOVERY AFTER SURGERY (ERAS) protocols and driven by improved peri-operative care, patient demand and financial incentives (a shift toward ambulatory surgery centres).
- The ERAS / rapid-recovery BUNDLE includes: pre-operative PATIENT EDUCATION and expectation-setting; SPINAL or REGIONAL anaesthesia in preference to general; MULTIMODAL, OPIOID-SPARING analgesia with PERIARTICULAR injection; TRANEXAMIC ACID to reduce blood loss; PONV prophylaxis; minimisation of DRAINS and URINARY CATHETERS; and EARLY same-day MOBILISATION/physiotherapy.
- PATIENT SELECTION is the cornerstone of safety: appropriate candidates are generally YOUNGER, HEALTHIER (ASA I-II), MOTIVATED, with good SOCIAL SUPPORT at home and without significant cardiopulmonary disease, severe obesity or obstructive sleep apnoea.
- In carefully selected patients at experienced centres, outcomes are GOOD: systematic-review data show about 95% achieve same-day discharge as planned, with LOW reoperation (~2%) and readmission/ER (~2%) rates within 90 days, no deaths and very few major complications, and high patient satisfaction (most would choose outpatient surgery again).
- The commonest causes of SAME-DAY-DISCHARGE FAILURE are ORTHOSTATIC HYPOTENSION (the leading cause), inadequate physical condition, NAUSEA/VOMITING, PAIN, and URINARY RETENTION.
- Risk factors for SDD failure include FEMALE sex, higher ASA class (III-IV), more drug ALLERGIES, SMOKING, and GENERAL anaesthesia - whereas SPINAL anaesthesia is PROTECTIVE; addressing these (and the protocol) improves success.
- “Rapid recovery rests on an ERAS bundle: spinal/regional anaesthesia, multimodal opioid-sparing analgesia + periarticular injection, tranexamic acid, no drains/catheters, early mobilisation - plus patient education and selection.
- “Patient SELECTION (ASA I-II, motivated, social support, no major cardiorespiratory disease) is what makes it safe - ~95% same-day discharge with low complications in selected patients.
- “Orthostatic hypotension is the #1 cause of same-day-discharge failure; general anaesthesia, female sex and ASA III-IV are risk factors (spinal anaesthesia is protective).
The bundle - spinal/regional anaesthesia, multimodal opioid-sparing analgesia with periarticular injection, tranexamic acid, no drains/catheters, PONV prophylaxis, and same-day mobilisation - controls the things that otherwise keep patients in hospital (pain, nausea, bleeding, immobility).
Patient selection is decisive: ASA I-II, motivated, with home support and without major cardiopulmonary disease. In selected patients at experienced centres it is safe; applied indiscriminately it is not.
What It Is & Why It Has Grown
Length of stay for hip and knee arthroplasty has fallen dramatically, and outpatient (same-day) and rapid-recovery arthroplasty - discharge on the day of surgery or within ~23 hours - is now an established option. The drivers are advances in peri-operative and intra-operative management (especially anaesthesia, analgesia and blood management), patient demand, and financial/system incentives, with a shift of selected cases to ambulatory surgery centres. The whole approach is built on enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) principles.

The ERAS / Rapid-Recovery Bundle
| 0 | 1 |
|---|---|
| Pre-operative | Patient education + expectation-setting; optimise comorbidities/anaemia; selection; carbohydrate loading / reduced fasting |
| Anaesthesia | SPINAL / regional anaesthesia in preference to general; PONV prophylaxis |
| Analgesia | MULTIMODAL, OPIOID-SPARING (paracetamol, NSAIDs, gabapentinoids selectively) + PERIARTICULAR local infiltration / nerve blocks |
| Blood / fluid | TRANEXAMIC ACID; euvolaemia; avoid drains and routine urinary catheters |
| Rehabilitation | EARLY same-day mobilisation/physiotherapy; clear discharge criteria |
Each bundle element removes a barrier to early discharge: spinal anaesthesia and multimodal/periarticular analgesia control pain with less opioid (so less nausea/sedation); tranexamic acid limits blood loss and the need for transfusion; avoiding drains/catheters and PONV prophylaxis remove tethers and sickness; and early mobilisation confirms the patient is safe to go home. The result is that the patient can meet discharge criteria (mobile, pain and nausea controlled, voiding, observations stable) on the day of surgery.
Patient Selection & Safety
- Younger, healthier - ASA I-II
- Motivated, understands the pathway, with good social/home support
- No significant cardiopulmonary disease; acceptable BMI; no untreated OSA
- Lives within reasonable distance of the centre
- ASA III-IV, significant comorbidity, frailty
- Poor social support / lives far away
- History suggesting high risk of the failure modes (orthostatic hypotension, PONV, retention)
- Patient or surgeon/centre inexperience with the pathway
In carefully selected patients operated on by experienced surgeons in major centres, outpatient arthroplasty is safe and effective: a systematic review of ~1000 patients found ~95% were discharged the same day as planned, with no deaths, only one major complication, and reoperation and readmission/ER rates of ~2% each within 90 days; the great majority of patients said they would choose outpatient surgery again. The crucial caveats are selection bias and the need for an experienced team and protocol - the data do not justify outpatient surgery for unselected patients.
Same-Day-Discharge Failure
When same-day discharge fails, the commonest cause is ORTHOSTATIC HYPOTENSION, followed by inadequate physical condition, nausea/vomiting, pain, and urinary retention - which is exactly why the ERAS bundle targets fluid status, opioid-sparing analgesia and PONV. Risk factors for failure (from meta-analysis) include FEMALE sex (especially for THA), ASA class III-IV, more than two allergies, smoking, and GENERAL anaesthesia - whereas SPINAL anaesthesia is PROTECTIVE. Anticipating and managing these (optimise fluids, use spinal anaesthesia, minimise opioids, manage PONV and voiding) improves same-day-discharge success.
| 0 | 1 |
|---|---|
| Commonest causes | Orthostatic hypotension (1st); inadequate physical condition; nausea/vomiting; pain; urinary retention |
| Risk factors | Female sex; ASA III-IV; more than 2 allergies; smoking; general anaesthesia |
| Protective | Spinal anaesthesia |
| No significant difference | Direct anterior vs posterior approach (THA) |
Evidence & Key Studies
The shift to same-day outpatient joint arthroplasty: a systematic review
- Across 10 studies (1009 patients), 94.7% were discharged the same day as planned; failures were mainly due to pain, hypotension and nausea.
- There were no deaths and only 1 major complication; reoperation and readmission/ER visits within 90 days were each ~2%.
- For carefully selected patients with experienced surgeons in major centres, outpatient arthroplasty may be safe and effective; further study is needed.
Causes and risk factors for same-day discharge failure after total hip and knee arthroplasty: a meta-analysis
- Across 8 studies (3492 patients), the most common cause of same-day-discharge failure was orthostatic hypotension, then inadequate physical condition, nausea/vomiting, pain and urinary retention.
- Risk factors for failure: female sex, ASA III and IV, more than two allergies, smoking, and general anaesthesia; spinal anaesthesia was protective.
- Direct anterior and posterior approaches showed no significant difference in same-day-discharge failure.
According to PubMed, the same-day-discharge success and complication/readmission figures come from the cited Hoffmann systematic review, and the causes and risk factors for same-day-discharge failure (orthostatic hypotension foremost; female sex/ASA III-IV/smoking/general anaesthesia as risks; spinal anaesthesia protective) from the cited Lamo-Espinosa meta-analysis. The ERAS bundle components and selection principles are standard, well-established enhanced-recovery practice. (See also our Arthroplasty Pre-operative Optimization, PMMA Bone Cement and Tranexamic Acid material.)
Clinical Decision Scenarios
Practise clinical reasoning and management decisions out loud
“What is rapid-recovery / outpatient arthroplasty, what does the enhanced-recovery bundle involve, and who is a suitable candidate?”
“What are the common reasons same-day discharge fails, and which patients are at higher risk? How would you reduce failure?”
Mnemonics & Memory Aids
RAPID
Hook:RAPID recovery: regional anaesthesia, analgesia multimodal, patient selection, TXA, discharge same-day.
FAIL
Hook:Same-day discharge can FAIL: falling BP, ASA/risk factors, ill (PONV/pain), leaking (retention).
What it is
- Same-day (or within 23h) discharge for hip/knee arthroplasty
- Enabled by ERAS; driven by better peri-op care, demand, incentives
- Often in ambulatory surgery centres
The bundle
- Education + selection; spinal/regional anaesthesia (not GA)
- Multimodal opioid-sparing analgesia + periarticular injection; PONV prophylaxis
- Tranexamic acid; avoid drains/catheters; early same-day mobilisation
Selection & safety
- Ideal: ASA I-II, motivated, social support, no major cardiopulmonary disease
- ~95% same-day discharge; ~2% reoperation/readmission; high satisfaction (selected patients)
- Needs experienced team/centre - not for unselected patients
SDD failure
- Causes: orthostatic hypotension (1st), inadequate condition, nausea/vomiting, pain, urinary retention
- Risk factors: female, ASA III-IV, more than 2 allergies, smoking, general anaesthesia
- Spinal anaesthesia protective; approach (anterior vs posterior) not significant