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General Orthopaedics

ACCURACY AND PRECISION OF ACETABULAR COMPONENT PLACEMENT WITH IMAGELESS NAVIGATION IN OBESE PATIENTS

Computer Assisted Orthopaedic Surgery (CAOS) 14th Annual Meeting



Abstract

Obesity is a risk factor for acetabular malposition when total hip arthroplasty (THA) is performed with manual orientation techniques. However, conflicting evidence exists regarding the usefulness of computer-assisted surgery for performing THA in obese patients. The purpose of this study was to compare the precision and accuracy of imageless navigation for acetabular component placement in obese versus non-obese patients.

After institutional review board approval, 459 THA performed for primary hip osteoarthritis were reviewed retrospectively. The same imageless navigation system was used for acetabular component placement in all THA. During surgery the supine anterior pelvic plane was referenced superficially. THA was performed via posterolateral approach in the lateral position. A hemispherical acetabular component was used, with target inclination of 40° and target anteversion of 25°. Computer software was used to determine acetabular orientation on postoperative anteroposterior pelvic radiographs. Obese patients (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2) were compared to non-obese patients. A 5° difference in mean orientation angles was considered clinically significant. Orientation error (accuracy) was defined as the absolute difference between the target orientation and the measured orientation. Student's t test was used to compare means. Hartley's test compared variances of the mean differences (precision). Fisher exact tests examined the relationship between obesity and component placement in the target zone (target ± 10°) for inclination and version. All statistical tests were two-sided with a significance level of 0.05.

Differences in mean inclination and anteversion between obese and non-obese groups were 1.1° (p=0.02 and p=0.08, respectively), and not clinically significant. Inclination accuracy trended toward improvement for non-obese patients (p=0.06). Inclination precision was better for non-obese patients (p=0.006). Accuracy and precision for anteversion were equal between the two groups (p=0.19 and p=0.95, respectively). There was no relationship between obesity and placement of the acetabulum outside of the target ranges for inclination (p=0.13), anteversion (p=0.39) or both (p=0.99), with a trend toward more inclination outliers in obese patients versus non-obese patients (7.3% versus 3.9%).

The observed differences in mean acetabular orientation angles were not clinically significant (< 5°), although inclination orientation was less accurate and precise for obese patients. In contrast to existing literature, we found no difference in the accuracy and precision with regard to anteversion in obese and non-obese patients. We propose that accurate superficial registration of landmarks in obese patients is achievable, and the use of imageless navigation likely improves acetabular positioning in obese and non-obese patients.