4.7 Article

Bone Cuts Accuracy of a System for Total Knee Arthroplasty including an Active Robotic Arm

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 10, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm10163714

Keywords

total knee arthroplasty; robotic-assisted surgery; position and orientation error; registration; level of experience

Funding

  1. Think Surgical Inc.

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This study assessed the bone cuts accuracy of a total knee arthroplasty system with an active robotic arm and found that the system achieved accurate bone cuts regardless of the surgeon's experience level. Although biases were observed, especially in femoral proximal-distal and tibial anterior-posterior positions, overall error values were below acceptable thresholds.
Introduction: This study aimed to assess the bone cuts accuracy of a system for total knee arthroplasty including an active robotic arm. A second objective was to compare the accuracy among orthopaedic surgeons of different levels of experience. Methods: Three orthopaedic surgeons cut 10 sawbone knees each. Planned and actual bone cuts were compared using computed tomography. Difference with respect to the planning was expressed as three position and three orientation errors following the anatomical planes. Statistical tests were performed to detect bias and compare surgeons. Results: None of the 30 knees presented an outlier error, meaning an error >= 3 mm or >= 3 degrees. The root-mean-square values of the 12 error types were below 0.8 mm or 0.8 degrees, except for the femoral proximal-distal errors (1.7 mm) and the tibial anterior-posterior errors (1.4 mm). Biases were observed, particularly in femoral proximal-distal and tibial anterior-posterior positions. Median differences between surgeons were all lower than 0.8 mm and 0.5 degrees, with statistically significant differences among surgeons in the femoral proximal-distal errors and the tibial anterior-posterior errors. Conclusions: The system tested in this study achieved accurate bone cuts independently of the surgeon's level of experience. Biases were observed, suggesting that there might be options to improve the accuracy, particularly in proximal-distal position for the femur and in anterior-posterior position for the tibia.

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