Reproducibility in modeling and simulation of the knee: Academic, industry, and regulatory perspectives

Author:

Imhauser Carl W.1ORCID,Baumann Andrew P.2ORCID,Liu Xiangyi (Cheryl)3,Bischoff Jeffrey E.4,Verdonschot Nico56,Fregly Benjamin J.7,Elmasry Shady S.18ORCID,Abdollahi Neda N.91011,Hume Donald R.1213,Rooks Nynke B.14,Schneider Marco T.‐Y.14ORCID,Zaylor William910,Besier Thor F.1415ORCID,Halloran Jason P.16ORCID,Shelburne Kevin B.1213ORCID,Erdemir Ahmet1117

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomechanics Hospital for Special Surgery New York New York USA

2. US Food and Drug Administration, Office of Science and Engineering Laboratories, Center for Devices and Radiological Health Division of Applied Mechanics Silver Spring Maryland USA

3. Stryker Orthopaedics Mahwah New Jersey USA

4. Zimmer Biomet Warsaw Indiana USA

5. Department of Biomechanical Engineering Technical Medical Institute at University of Twente Enschede The Netherlands

6. Orthopaedic Research Lab Radboud University Medical Centre Nijmegen The Netherlands

7. Department of Mechanical Engineering Rice University Houston Texas USA

8. Department of Mechanical Design and Production, Faculty of Engineering Cairo University Cairo Egypt

9. Center for Human Machine Systems Cleveland State University Cleveland Ohio USA

10. Department of Mechanical Engineering Cleveland State University Cleveland Ohio USA

11. Department of Biomedical Engineering Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic Cleveland Ohio USA

12. Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering University of Denver Denver Colorado USA

13. Center for Orthopaedic Biomechanics University of Denver Denver Colorado USA

14. Auckland Bioengineering Institute University of Auckland Auckland New Zealand

15. Department of Engineering Science, Faculty of Engineering University of Auckland Auckland New Zealand

16. Applied Sciences Laboratory, Institute for Shock Physics Washington State University Spokane Washington USA

17. Computational Biomodeling (CoBi) Core, Lerner Research Institute Cleveland Clinic Cleveland Ohio USA

Abstract

AbstractStakeholders in the modeling and simulation (M&S) community organized a workshop at the 2019 Annual Meeting of the Orthopaedic Research Society (ORS) entitled “Reproducibility in Modeling and Simulation of the Knee: Academic, Industry, and Regulatory Perspectives.” The goal was to discuss efforts among these stakeholders to address irreproducibility in M&S focusing on the knee joint. An academic representative from a leading orthopedic hospital in the United States described a multi‐institutional, open effort funded by the National Institutes of Health to assess model reproducibility in computational knee biomechanics. A regulatory representative from the United States Food and Drug Administration indicated the necessity of standards for reproducibility to increase utility of M&S in the regulatory setting. An industry representative from a major orthopedic implant company emphasized improving reproducibility by addressing indeterminacy in personalized modeling through sensitivity analyses, thereby enhancing preclinical evaluation of joint replacement technology. Thought leaders in the M&S community stressed the importance of data sharing to minimize duplication of efforts. A survey comprised 103 attendees revealed strong support for the workshop and for increasing emphasis on computational modeling at future ORS meetings. Nearly all survey respondents (97%) considered reproducibility to be an important issue. Almost half of respondents (45%) tried and failed to reproduce the work of others. Two‐thirds of respondents (67%) declared that individual laboratories are most responsible for ensuring reproducible research whereas 44% thought that journals are most responsible. Thought leaders and survey respondents emphasized that computational models must be reproducible and credible to advance knee M&S.

Funder

National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine

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