Research groups
Colleges
Hemant Pandit
MBBS, MS (Orth), DNB (Orth), FRCS (Orth), DPhil (Oxon)
Honorary Departmental Researcher
- Visiting Professor: All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), New Delhi, India
- Clinical Lead for ‘out of hours’ hospital management of patients at Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre
- Deputy Director of the taught MSc (Musculoskeletal Sciences) course
- Deputy Director of OOEC (Oxford Orthopaedic Engineering Centre)
- Co-Director of COSECSA (College of Surgeons of East Central and Southern Africa) Oxford Orthopaedic Link (COOL)
- National Joint Registry (NJR) Clinical Lead for Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust
Hemant specialises in hip and knee surgery and focuses his research on patient-based studies and biomechanics in this area. Hemant’s current research involves identifying the aetiology and treatment for hip and knee arthritis and ways to improve outcome. His research includes biomechanical studies, assessment of knee kinematics, outcomes after unicompartmental knee replacement (UKR), metal-on-metal hip resurfacings, and clinical trials of various interventions for osteoarthritis. His work on adverse reaction to metal debris (also known as pseudotumour) after metal-on-metal hip resurfacing was instrumental in changing clinical practice.
Hemant is also Co-Director with Professor Chris Lavy of COOL, a multi-country programme in trauma and orthopaedics training and research in East, Central and Southern Africa. COSECSA fosters postgraduate education in surgery and provides surgical training throughout East, Central and Southern Africa. This project is funded through the Health Partnership Scheme, which is funded by the UK Department for International Development (DFID) and managed by the Tropical Health Education Trust (THET).
Hemant also has a number of other national and international collaborations, including: Dr Philip Bejon (Oxford, UK), Prof Michael Nevitt (San Francisco, USA), Prof Rajesh Malhotra (AIIMS, New Delhi, India) and Prof Kathryn Jacobsen (Virginia, USA).
Key publications
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Pseudotumours associated with metal-on-metal hip resurfacings.
Journal article
Pandit H. et al, (2008), J bone joint surg br, 90, 847 - 851
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Association of hip and pelvic geometry with tibiofemoral osteoarthritis: multicenter osteoarthritis study (MOST).
Journal article
Boissonneault A. et al, (2014), Osteoarthritis cartilage, 22, 1129 - 1135
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Minimally invasive Oxford phase 3 unicompartmental knee replacement: results of 1000 cases.
Journal article
Pandit H. et al, (2011), J bone joint surg br, 93, 198 - 204
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Improved fixation in cementless unicompartmental knee replacement: five-year results of a randomized controlled trial.
Journal article
Pandit H. et al, (2013), J bone joint surg am, 95, 1365 - 1372
Recent publications
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Early Recovery Following Total and Unicompartmental Knee Arthroplasty Assessed Using Novel Patient-Reported Measures.
Journal article
Strickland LH. et al, (2021), J arthroplasty, 36, 3413 - 3420
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Most unicompartmental knee replacement revisions could be avoided: a radiographic evaluation of revised Oxford knees in the National Joint Registry.
Journal article
Kennedy JA. et al, (2020), Knee surg sports traumatol arthrosc, 28, 3926 - 3934
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Optimal interference of the tibial component of the cementless Oxford Unicompartmental Knee Replacement.
Journal article
Campi S. et al, (2018), Bone joint res, 7, 226 - 231
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Do trauma courses change practice? A qualitative review of 20 courses in East, Central and Southern Africa.
Journal article
Ologunde R. et al, (2017), Injury, 48, 2010 - 2016
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Lateral unicompartmental knee replacement for the treatment of arthritis progression after medial unicompartmental replacement.
Journal article
Pandit H. et al, (2017), Knee surg sports traumatol arthrosc, 25, 669 - 674