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General Orthopaedics

LEARNING CURVE AND EARLY PATIENT SATISFACTION OF ROBOTIC-ASSISTED TOTAL KNEE ARTHROPLASTY

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



Abstract

Introduction

There is increasing pressure on healthcare providers to demonstrate competitiveness in quality, patient outcomes and cost. Robotic and computer-assisted total knee arthroplasty (TKA) have been shown to be more accurate than conventional TKA, thereby potentially improving quality and outcomes, however these technologies are usually associated with longer procedural times and higher costs for hospitals. The aim of this study was to determine the surgical efficiency, learning curve and early patient satisfaction of robotic-assisted TKA with a contemporary imageless system.

Methods

The first 29 robotic-assisted TKA cases performed by a single surgeon having no prior experience with computer or robotic-assisted TKA were reviewed. System time stamps were extracted from computer surgical reports to determine the time taken from the first step in the anatomical registration process, the hip center acquisition, to the end of the last bone resection, the validation of the proximal tibial resection. Additional time metrics included: a) array attachment, b) anatomical registration, c) robotic-assisted femoral resection, d) tibial resection, e) trailing, f) implant insertion, and skin-to-skin time. The Residual Time was also calculated as the skin-to-skin time minus the time taken for steps a) to f), representing the time spent on all other steps of the procedure. Patients completed surveys at 3 months to determine their overall satisfaction with their surgical joint.

Results

All time metrics decreased significantly after the first 7 cases, except the residual time (table 1 and figure 1). Mean skin-to-skin time significantly decreased from 83.7min to 57.1min (p=0.0008) beyond 7 cases, and hip center to final cut validation time decreased from 30.2min to 20.3min (p=0.0002).

85.7% (24/29) of patients were “Fully satisfied” and 14.3% (5/29) were “Partly satisfied”.

Cost analysis showed there were no capital costs associated with acquisition of the robotic system and per case cost was equal to conventional TKA.

Conclusion

Improvements in surgical efficiency and quality are becoming increasing important in today's healthcare environment. The results of this study indicated equal cost, a short learning curve and comparable procedure times to conventional TKA. The Patient Reported Outcomes with this group of patients was very high compared to rates reported in the literature.


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