High degree of alignment precision associated with total knee arthroplasty performed using a surgical robot or handheld navigation

Author:

Shen Tony S.1,Uppstrom Tyler J.1,Walker Paul J.2,Yu Jonathan S.2,Cheng Ryan1,Mayman David J.1,Jerabek Seth A.1,Ast Michael P.1

Affiliation:

1. Adult Reconstruction and Joint Replacement Service Hospital for Special Surgery 535 East 70th Street 10021 New York NY USA

2. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery UCLA Los Angeles CA USA

Abstract

AbstractPurposeThe purpose of this study was to compare the precision of bony resections during total knee arthroplasty (TKA) performed using different computer‐assisted technologies.MethodsPatients who underwent a primary TKA using an imageless accelerometer‐based handheld navigation system (KneeAlign2®, OrthAlign Inc.) or computed tomography‐based large‐console surgical robot (Mako®, Stryker Corp.) from 2017 to 2020 were retrospectively reviewed. Templated alignment targets and demographic data were collected. Coronal plane alignment of the femoral and tibial components and tibial slope were measured on postoperative radiographs. Patients with excessive flexion or rotation preventing accurate measurement were excluded.ResultsA total of 240 patients who underwent TKA using either a handheld (n = 120) or robotic (n = 120) system were included. There were no statistically significant differences in age, sex, and BMI between groups. A small but statistically significant difference in the precision of the distal femoral resection was observed between the handheld and robotic cohorts (1.5° vs. 1.1° difference between templated and measured alignments, p = 0.024), though this is likely clinically insignificant. There were no significant differences in the precision of the tibial resection between the handheld and robotic groups (coronal plane 0.9° vs. 1.0°, n.s.; sagittal plane 1.2° vs. 1.1°, n.s.). There were no significant differences in the rate of overall precision between cohorts (n.s.).ConclusionsA high degree of component alignment precision was observed for both imageless handheld navigation and CT‐based robotic cohorts. Surgeons considering options for computer‐assisted TKA should take other important factors, including surgical principles, templating software, ligament balancing, intraoperative adjustability, equipment logistics, and cost, into account.Level of evidenceIII.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Surgery

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