Colleges
Andrew Price
BA MBB (Ch) FRCS, FRCS (Trauma & Orthopaedics), DPhil
Professor of Orthopaedics Surgery
- Clinical Director T&O, NOC
- Consultant Knee Surgeon, NOC
- Senior Clinical Research Fellow
Professor Andrew Price studied medicine at the University of Cambridge (Gonville and Caius College) before completing his clinical studies at St.Thomas' Hospital in London. For his Orthopaedic training he joined the Oxford training programme in 1997, becoming a Clinical Lecturer in NDORMS in 2001.
He was awarded a DPhil in 2003 through the University of Oxford (Worcester College), studying the Oxford partial knee replacement. He then completed a year of specialist Knee Fellowship training in Melbourne, returning to NDORMs and the Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre in 2004, where he was subsequently appointed Reader and Honorary Consultant in Knee Surgery.
In 2011, through the University of Oxford Recognition of Distinction exercise, he was made a Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at NDORMS. His clinical work as a Consultant Knee Surgeon is based at the Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre, where he has recently been appointed to Clinical Director T&O. His research is based in NDORMS at the Botnar Centre, where he Leads the Knee Research Group.
Andrew is Fellow of Worcester College (Tutor for Graduate Entry Medical Studies), a member of the British Orthopaedic Association, member of the UK National Joint Registry Steering Committee and Past President of the British Association for Surgery of the Knee (BASK)
Recent publications
ssessing clinical and cost effectiveness of total versus partial knee replacement (TOPKAT): 10-year follow-up of a multicentre, randomised controlled trial.
Journal article
Beard DJ. et al, (2026), Lancet Rheumatol, 8, e116 - e126
The one-year trajectories of patient-reported outcomes are better for medial unicompartmental knee arthroplasty compared with total knee arthroplasty : a matched cohort study.
Journal article
Elkjær Christensen AL. et al, (2025), Bone Jt Open, 6, 1588 - 1597
What factors are important to patients when considering a revision total knee replacement in a network model of care? An exploratory qualitative analysis.
Journal article
Matthews AH. et al, (2025), BMC Musculoskelet Disord, 27
ssessing clinical and cost effectiveness of total versus partial knee replacement (TOPKAT): 10-year follow-up of a multicentre, randomised controlled trial
Journal article
Beard D. et al, (2025), Lancet Rheumatology