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Abstract. Background. Distal femoral osteotomy is an established successful procedure which can delay the progression of arthritis and the need for knee arthroplasty. The surgery, however, is complex and lengthy and consequently it is generally the preserve of highly experienced specialists and thus not widely offered. Patient specific instrumentation is known to reduce procedural complexity, time, and surgeons’ anxiety levels. 1. in proximal tibial osteotomy procedures. This study evaluated a novel patient specific distal femoral osteotomy procedure (Orthoscape, Bath, UK) which aimed to use custom-made implants and instrumentation to provide a precision correction while also simplifying the procedure so that more surgeons would be comfortable offering the procedure. Presenting problem. Three patients (n=3) with early-stage knee arthritis presented with valgus malalignment, the source of which was predominantly located within the distal femur, rather than intraarticular. Using conventional techniques and instrumentation, distal femoral knee osteotomy cases typically require 1.5–2 hours surgery time. The use of bi-planar osteotomy cuts have been shown to improve intraoperative stability as well as bone healing times. 2. This normally also increases surgical complexity; however, multiple cutting slots can be easily incorporated into patient specific instrumentation. Clinical management. All three cases were treated at a high-volume tertiary referral centre (Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli, Bologna) using medial closing wedge distal femoral knee osteotomies by a team experienced in using patient specific osteotomy systems. 3. Virtual surgical planning was conducted using CT-scans and long-leg weight-bearing x-rays (Orthoscape, Bath, UK). Patient specific surgical guides and custom-made locking plates were design for each case. The guides were designed to allow temporary positioning, drilling and bi-planar saw-cutting. The drills were positioned such that the drills above and below the osteotomy became parallel on closing following osteotomy wedge removal. This gave reassurance of the achieved correction allowed the plate to be located precisely over the drills. All screw lengths were pre-measured. Discussion. The surgical time reduced to approximately 30 minutes by the third procedure. It was evident that surgical time was saved because no intraoperative screw length measurements were required, relatively few x-rays were used to confirm the position of the surgical guide, and the use of custom instrumentation significantly reduced the surgical inventory. The reduced invasiveness and ease of surgery may contribute to faster patient recovery compared to conventional techniques. The final post-operative alignment was within 1° of the planned alignment in all cases. Declaration of Interest. (a) fully declare any financial or other potential conflict of interest