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General Orthopaedics

DEVIATION FROM NEUTRAL MECHANICAL ALIGNMENT DOES NOT CORRELATE WITH IMPLANT MIGRATION AT ONE YEAR

The International Society for Technology in Arthroplasty (ISTA), 27th Annual Congress. PART 2.



Abstract

Introduction

Debate over appropriate alignment in total knee arthroplasty has become a topical subject as technology allows planned alignments that differ from a neutral mechanical axis. These surgical techniques employ patient-specific cutting blocks derived from 3D reconstructions of pre-operative imaging, commonly MRI or CT. The patient-specific OtisMed system uses a detailed MRI scan of the knee for 3D reconstruction to estimate the kinematic axis, dictating the cutting planes in the custom-fit cutting blocks machined for each patient [1, 2].

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the correlation between post-operative limb alignment and implant migration in subjects receiving shape match derived kinematic alignment.

Methods

In a randomized controlled trial comparing patient-specific cutting blocks to navigated surgery, seventeen subjects in the patient specific group had complete 1 year data. They received cruciate retaining cemented total knee replacements (Triathlon, Stryker) using patient-specific cutting blocks (OtisMed custom-fit blocks, Stryker). Intra-operatively, 6–8 tantalum markers (1 mm diameter) were inserted in the proximal tibia. Radiostereometric analysis (RSA) [3, 4] exams were performed with subjects supine on post-operative day 1 and at 6 week, 3, 6, and 12 month follow-ups with dual overhead tubes (Rad 92, Varian Medical Systems, Inc., Palo Alto, CA, USA), digital detectors (CXDI-55C, Canon Inc., Tokyo, Japan), and a uniplanar calibration box (Halifax Biomedical Inc., Mabou, NS, Canada). RSA exams were analyzed in Model-based RSA (Version 3.32, RSAcore, Leiden, The Netherlands. Post-operative limb alignment was evaluated from weight-bearing long-leg films.

Results

Post-operative limb alignments ranged from 5 degrees of varus to 5 degrees of valgus. Comparing implant migration to post-operative alignment did not demonstrate a relationship between deviation from neutral mechanical alignment and increased migration (Pearson correlation coefficient = 0.25, P = 0.33) (Figure 1).

Conclusions

Previous studies have suggested that alignment of greater than 3 degrees from neutral may have adverse effects on implant survivorship [5], but this early data does not suggest increased migration with non-neutral alignment. Continued evaluation with RSA to 2 years will be performed to monitor these subjects over the longer term.


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