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General Orthopaedics

EARLY RESULTS OF A SMART NAVIGATION TOOL FOR DELIVERING A PATIENT-SPECIFIC CUP ORIENTATION

The International Society for Technology in Arthroplasty (ISTA), 30th Annual Congress, Seoul, South Korea, September 2017. Part 1 of 2.



Abstract

Introduction

The Intellijoint HIP system is a mini-optical navigation system designed to intraoperatively assist with cup orientation, leg length and offset in total hip replacement (THR). As with any imageless navigation system, acquiring the pelvic reference frame intraoperatively requires assumptions. The system does however have the ability to define the native acetabular orientation intra-operatively by registering 3-points along the bony rim. In conjunction with a pre-operative CT scan, the authors hypothesised that this native acetabular plane could be used as an intraoperative reference to achieve a planned patient-specific cup orientation.

Method

Thirty-eight THR patients received preoperative OPSTM dynamic planning (Optimized Ortho, Sydney). On the pre-operative 3D model of each patient's acetabulum, a 3-point plane was defined by selecting recognisable features on the bony rim. The difference in inclination and anteversion angles between this native 3-point reference plane and the desired optimal orientation was pre-operatively calculated, and reported to the surgeon as “adjustment angles”. Intraoperatively, the surgeon tried to register the same 3-points on the bony rim. Knowing the intraoperative native acetabular orientation, the surgeon applied the pre-calculated adjustment angles to achieve the planned patient specific cup orientation. All patients received a post-operative CT scan at one-week and the deviation between planned and achieved cup orientation was measured. Additionally, the cup orientation that would have been achieved if the standard Intellijoint pelvic acquisition was performed was retrospectively determined.

Results

The absolute mean inclination deviation from plan of the 3-point rim method was 5.6° (0.0° to 16.7°). The absolute mean anteversion deviation from plan of the 3-point rim method was 2.7° (0.1° to 9.5°). This constituted 90% within 10° of the desired patient-specific target. All anteversion measurements were within 10°, with 90% within 5°.

The retrospective analysis on what would have been achieved if the standard pelvic acquisition was used, showed that the absolute mean inclination deviation from plan would have been 4.0° (0.0° to 14.2°) and the absolute mean anteversion deviation would have been 6.7° (0.1° to 24.1°). Only 74% of cups would have been within 10° of the desired target.

Conclusions

  • Using the native acetabular orientation as a reference plane for delivering a patient-specific cup orientation showed promising preliminary results

  • Errors in inclination were significantly larger than anteversion. More points on the rim could reduce this error


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