Published in:
01-12-2013 | Clinical Research
Is TKA Using Patient-specific Instruments Comparable to Conventional TKA? A Randomized Controlled Study of One System
Authors:
Yoon Whan Roh, MD, Tae Woo Kim, MD, Sahnghoon Lee, MD, PhD, Sang Cheol Seong, MD, PhD, Myung Chul Lee, MD, PhD
Published in:
Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research®
|
Issue 12/2013
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Abstract
Background
Patient-specific CT-based instrumentation may reduce implant malpositioning and improve alignment in TKA. However, it is not known whether this innovation is an advance that benefits patients.
Questions/purposes
We evaluated (1) the precision of patient-specific TKA by comparing the incidence of outliers in postoperative alignment between TKAs using patient-specific instruments and TKAs using conventional instruments, and (2) the reliability of patient-specific instruments by intraoperatively investigating whether the surgery could be completed with patient-specific instruments alone.
Methods
In this randomized controlled trial, we compared patient-specific TKA instruments from one manufacturer (n = 50) with conventional TKA instruments (n = 50). Postoperative hip-knee-ankle angles, femoral component rotation, and coronal and sagittal alignments of each component were measured. The validity of the patient-specific instrument was examined using cross-checking procedures with conventional instruments during the surgeries. When the procedure could not be completed accurately with patient-specific instruments, the procedure was converted to TKA using conventional instruments, and the frequency of this occurrence was tallied.
Results
Outliers in the hip-knee-ankle angle were comparable between groups (12% in the patient-specific instrument group and 10% in the conventional instrument group). Other parameters such as sagittal alignment and femoral component rotation did not differ in terms of outliers. Patient-specific guides were abandoned in eight knees (16%) during the surgery because of malrotation of the femoral components and decreased slope of the tibia.
Conclusions
Accuracy was comparable between TKAs done with patient-specific instruments and those done with conventional instruments. However, the patient-specific instrument procedures had to be aborted frequently, incurring expenses that did not benefit patients.
Level of Evidence
Level II, therapeutic study. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.