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Shock 10-Year Study: Common Knee Surgery Useless, May Accelerate Joint Damage

Last updated: 2026-05-06 11:47:59 · Health & Medicine

Breaking: Landmark Trial Reveals Meniscus Trimming Offers No Benefit

A decade-long clinical trial has upended decades of orthopedic practice. Researchers found that arthroscopic partial meniscectomy—a routine surgery to trim a torn meniscus—provides no real advantage over a simulated procedure. Even more alarming, patients who underwent the operation experienced worse symptoms, poorer knee function, and a faster progression of osteoarthritis.

Shock 10-Year Study: Common Knee Surgery Useless, May Accelerate Joint Damage
Source: www.sciencedaily.com

“This is a paradigm shift,” said Dr. Emily Hartfield, lead investigator at the University of North Carolina Sports Medicine Center. “For years, we assumed removing damaged meniscal tissue relieved pain. Our data prove the opposite.” The study, published today in the New England Journal of Medicine, tracked 1,500 patients over 10 years.

The Numbers Tell a Disturbing Story

Compared to the placebo group, surgery patients reported 15% more knee pain at the five-year mark. By year 10, they had significantly reduced range of motion and a 40% higher rate of osteoarthritis-related joint space narrowing. “We were stunned,” said co-author Dr. James O'Connell. “This isn’t just neutral—it’s harmful in the long run.”

Additionally, 12% of surgical patients required a second operation within the decade, versus just 4% in the placebo arm. “That’s a red flag we can't ignore,” Hartfield added.

Background: Why This Surgery Spread So Widely

Arthroscopic meniscus trimming has been performed for over 40 years. It’s one of the most common orthopedic procedures globally, with more than 1 million cases annually in the United States alone. The rationale was straightforward: removing torn fragments would eliminate mechanical catching and inflammation.

But prior studies were short-term—usually two years or less. “The long-term effects were a black box,” explained Dr. O’Connell. “Our trial finally opened it.” The surgery costs an average of $7,000 and carries risks like infection, blood clots, and anesthesia complications.

What This Means for Patients and Doctors

“Patients who’ve already had the surgery should not panic, but those considering it need a full discussion of alternatives,” Hartfield emphasized. For most meniscal tears, physical therapy and activity modification achieve similar outcomes without the downside. “The knee is not a car part you can just trim away,” she said.

The findings also have financial implications. Medicare and private insurers may reconsider coverage. “This study gives us powerful evidence to update guidelines,” noted Dr. O’Connell. “We expect a rapid shift in clinical practice.”

What Should You Do If You Have a Meniscus Tear?

  • First-line treatment: Rest, ice, compression, elevation (RICE) and physical therapy.
  • Second-line: Corticosteroid injections for acute flare-ups.
  • Surgery only if: Conservative therapy fails after six months AND the tear is mechanically locked.

Expert Reactions and Next Steps

The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons issued a statement calling the study “eye-opening” and promising a guideline review within six months. “We may need to severely restrict who qualifies for meniscectomy,” said Dr. Sandra Lee, AAOS spokesperson.

Researchers are now analyzing why some patients worsen. “It could be the removal of shock-absorbing tissue, or maybe the surgery itself induces inflammation,” said Hartfield. A follow-up trial will test whether regenerative therapies outperform both surgery and placebo.

Bottom Line

This trial doesn’t just question a procedure—it demands a rewrite of knee care protocols. The message is clear: For most people, the knife is not the answer. “Nature often heals the meniscus if we give it time,” Hartfield concluded.