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Knee

THE OUTLIER ISSUE IN CURRENT TOTAL KNEE ARTHROPLASTY

The Knee Society (TKS) 2018 Members Meeting, Saint Louis, MO, USA, September 2018.



Abstract

Introduction

Implant malalignment is an important predictor of prosthetic failure following total knee arthroplasty (TKA). The purpose of this study was to determine the incidence of outliers for common alignment targets and the impact of surgeon volume and experience on the accuracy of implant alignment with current generation manual instrumentation.

Methods

This study was a retrospective, multi-center, radiographic analysis of 1675 consecutive primary uncomplicated TKAs from seven surgeons at three academic and state-funded centers in the US and UK. Surgeons were categorized as “high-volume” (≥50 TKAs/year) and “high-experience” (≥5 years post-fellowship). Femorotibial, tibial varus/valgus, and posterior tibial slope angles were digitally measured using postoperative radiographs. Femorotibial (<2° or >8° valgus), tibial (> ±3° deviation from the neutral axis), and tibial slope (<0° or >7° of flexion for cruciate retaining, <0° or >5° of flexion for posterior stabilized) angle outliers were identified. The proportion of outliers among surgeons in each subgroup was compared.

Results

When comparing high-and low-volume surgeons, the proportion of femorotibial (12% vs. 19%, p <0.0001), posterior slope (17% vs. 28%, p <0.0001), and total outliers (12% vs. 19%, p <0.0001) was significantly lower in the high-volume group. Furthermore, the proportion of knees with well-aligned implants in all three measurements (69% vs. 53%, p <0.0001) was significantly higher in the high-volume group. When comparing high-and low-experience surgeons, the proportion of femorotibial (14% vs. 17%, p = 0.046), tibial (9% vs. 6%, p = 0.030), posterior slope (19% vs. 26%, p <0.0001), and total outliers (14% vs. 17%, p = 0.006) was higher in the low-volume group. Furthermore, the proportion of knees with well-aligned implants in all three measurements (64% vs. 58%, p = 0.008) was significantly higher in the high-experience group.

Conclusions

Low surgeon volume and experience predispose to implant malalignment following TKA, with surgical volume bearing a greater influence on alignment accuracy. Even among high volume, high experience surgeons, outliers in at least one standard alignment target occur in over 30% of cases with current standard instrumentation.