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General Orthopaedics

ADOPTION OF ROBOTIC VERSUS FLUOROSCOPIC GUIDANCE IN TOTAL HIP ARTHROPLASTY: IS ACETABULAR POSITIONING IMPROVED IN THE LEARNING CURVE?

The International Society for Technology in Arthroplasty (ISTA), 29th Annual Congress, October 2016. PART 2.



Abstract

Background

Acetabulum positioning affects dislocation rates, component impingement, bearing surface wear rates, and need for revision surgery. Novel techniques purport to improve the accuracy and precision of acetabular component position, but may come have significant learning curves. Our aim was to assess whether adopting robotic or fluoroscopic techniques improve acetabulum positioning compared to manual THA during the learning curve.

Methods

Three types of THAs were compared in this retrospective cohort: 1) the first 100 fluoroscopically guided direct anterior THAs (fluoroscopic anterior, FA) done by a posterior surgeon learning the anterior approach, 2) the first 100 robotic assisted posterior THAs done by a surgeon learning robotic assisted surgery (robotic posterior, RP) and 3) the last 100 manual posterior THAs done by each surgeon (total 200 THAs) prior to adoption of novel techniques (manual posterior, MP). Component position was measured on plain radiographs. Radiographic measurements were done by two blinded observers. The percentage of hips within the surgeons' target zone (inclination 30°–50°, anteversion 10°–30°) was calculated, along with the percentage within the safe zone of Lewinnek (inclination 30°–50°; anteversion 5°–25°) and Callanan (inclination 30°–45°; anteversion 5°–25°). Relative risk and absolute risk reduction were calculated. Variances (square of the SDs) were used to describe the variability of cup position.

Results

76% of MP THAs were within the surgeons' target zone compared with 84% of FA THAs and 97% of RP THAs. This difference was statistically significant, associated with a relative risk reduction of 87% (RR 0.13 [0.04–0.40], p<.01, ARR 21%, NNT 5) for RP compared to MP THAs. Compared to FA THAs, RP THAs were associated with a relative risk reduction of 81% (RR 0.19 [0.06–0.62], p<.01, ARR 13%, NNT 8). Variances were lower for acetabulum inclination and anteversion in RP THAs (14.0 and 19.5) as compared to the MP (37.5 and 56.3) and FA (24.5 and 54.6) groups. These differences were statistically significant (P<.01).

Conclusion

Adoption of robotic techniques delivers significant and immediate improvement in the precision of acetabular component positioning during the learning curve. While fluoroscopy has been shown to be beneficial with experience, a learning curve exists before precision improves significantly.


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