Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, MS, USA.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2013 Jan;471(1):169-74. doi: 10.1007/s11999-012-2573-3.
Patient-specific instrumentation potentially improves surgical precision and decreases operative time in total knee arthroplasty (TKA) but there is little supporting data to confirm this presumption.
QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: We asked whether patient-specific instrumentation would require infrequent intraoperative changes to replicate a single surgeon's preferences during TKA and whether patient-specific instrumentation guides would fit securely.
We prospectively evaluated the plan and surgery in 60 patients treated with 66 TKAs performed with patient-specific instrumentation and recorded any changes. A subset of six postoperative radiographic changes to the femoral and tibial components (implant size, coronal and sagittal alignment) was analyzed to determine if surgeon intervention was beneficial. Each guide was evaluated to determine fit. We compared patient demographics and implant sizing in the patient-specific instrumentation group with a control group in which traditional instrumentation was used.
We recorded 161 intraoperative changes in 66 knee arthroplasties (2.4 changes/knee) performed with patient-specific instrumentation. The predetermined implant size was changed intraoperatively in 77% of femurs and 53% of tibias. We identified a subset of 95 intraoperative changes that could be radiographically evaluated to determine if our changes were an improvement or detriment to reaching goal alignment. Eighty-two of the 95 changes (86%) made by the surgeon were an improvement to the recommended alignment or size of patient-specific instrumentation. The guide did not fit securely on eight femurs (12%) and three tibias (5%). Tourniquet time and blood loss were not improved with patient-specific instrumentation.
We caution surgeons against blind acceptance of patient-specific instrumentation technology without supportive data.
患者特异性手术器械在全膝关节置换术(TKA)中可提高手术精度,减少手术时间,但目前几乎没有数据可以证实这一假设。
问题/目的:我们想知道患者特异性手术器械是否需要频繁地进行术中调整,以复制单一外科医生在 TKA 中的偏好,以及患者特异性手术器械导向器是否能够牢固贴合。
我们前瞻性地评估了 60 例患者的 66 例 TKA 手术计划和手术过程,记录了所有的变化。分析了股骨和胫骨组件的术后放射学变化的六个亚组(植入物大小、冠状和矢状面的对齐),以确定外科医生的干预是否有益。评估了每个导向器,以确定其贴合度。我们比较了患者的人口统计学数据和植入物大小,将使用患者特异性手术器械的患者组与使用传统手术器械的对照组进行比较。
我们记录了 66 例膝关节置换术中使用患者特异性手术器械的 161 次术中变化(2.4 次/膝关节)。在 77%的股骨和 53%的胫骨中,我们改变了术前预定的植入物大小。我们确定了一个亚组 95 个术中变化,可以通过影像学评估来确定我们的变化是否有助于达到目标对齐。在 95 个可评估的变化中,82 个(86%)是外科医生的改进,以达到推荐的对齐或患者特异性手术器械的尺寸。有 8 个股骨(12%)和 3 个胫骨(5%)的导向器贴合不牢固。使用患者特异性手术器械并没有改善止血带时间和失血量。
我们告诫外科医生,在没有支持性数据的情况下,不要盲目接受患者特异性手术器械技术。