Mancino Fabio, Cacciola Giorgio, Malahias Michael-Alexander, De Filippis Roberto, De Marco Davide, Di Matteo Vincenzo, A Gu, Sculco Peter K, Maccauro Giulio, De Martino Ivan
Division of Orthopaedics and Traumatology, Department of Aging, Neurological, Orthopaedic and Head- Neck Studies, Fondazione Policlinico Universitario Agostino Gemelli IRCCS, Rome, Italy.
Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Rome, Italy.
Orthop Rev (Pavia). 2020 Jun 25;12(Suppl 1):8657. doi: 10.4081/or.2020.8657. eCollection 2020 Jun 29.
Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is a highly successful operation that improves patients' quality of life and functionality. Yet, up to 20% of TKA patients remain unsatisfied with the functional outcomes. Robotic TKA has gained increased attention and popularity in order to improve patient satisfaction and implant survivorship by increasing accuracy and precision of component implantation. The current systematic review was run in order to compare implant survivorship, complication rates, clinical outcomes, and radiological outcomes between robotic-assisted TKA (RA) and conventional manual TKA (CM). Articles were referenced from the US National Library of Medicine (PubMed/MEDLINE), EMBASE, and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. Nine comparative studies with 1199 operated knees in 1159 patients were included, 614 underwent active or semiactive robotic-assisted TKA compared to 585 CM-TKA. Improvements in the RA group were reported for early functional outcomes, radiographic outliers (RA 16% vs CM 76%) and radiolucent lines (RA 0% vs CM 35%). No significant differences between the two groups were reported in overall survivorship (RA 98.3% vs CM 97.3%), complication rate (RA 2.4% vs CM 1.4%) and operative time (RA 88 min vs CM 79 min). Despite higher costs, roboticassisted TKA offers better short-term clinical outcomes when compared to conventional manual technique with reduction in radiographic outliers and reduced risks of iatrogenic soft tissues injuries (reduced blood loss and postoperative drainage). Further high-quality long-term studies of modern robotic systems are required in order to evaluate how the increased accuracy and reduced outliers affect the long-term survivorship of the implants and the clinical outcomes.
全膝关节置换术(TKA)是一种非常成功的手术,可改善患者的生活质量和功能。然而,高达20%的TKA患者对功能结果仍不满意。为了通过提高假体植入的准确性和精确性来提高患者满意度和假体生存率,机器人辅助TKA受到了越来越多的关注并越来越受欢迎。进行本次系统评价是为了比较机器人辅助TKA(RA)和传统手动TKA(CM)之间的假体生存率、并发症发生率、临床结果和影像学结果。文章参考了美国国立医学图书馆(PubMed/MEDLINE)、EMBASE和Cochrane系统评价数据库。纳入了9项比较研究中的1159例患者的共1199个手术膝关节,其中614例接受了主动或半主动机器人辅助TKA,而CM-TKA为585例。据报告,RA组在早期功能结果、影像学异常(RA为16%,CM为76%)和透亮线(RA为0%,CM为35%)方面有所改善。两组在总体生存率(RA为98.3%,CM为97.3%)、并发症发生率(RA为2.4%,CM为1.4%)和手术时间(RA为88分钟,CM为79分钟)方面未报告有显著差异。尽管成本较高,但与传统手动技术相比,机器人辅助TKA具有更好的短期临床结果,影像学异常减少,医源性软组织损伤风险降低(失血和术后引流减少)。需要对现代机器人系统进行进一步高质量的长期研究以评估提高的准确性和减少的异常如何影响假体的长期生存率和临床结果。