ISAKOS: 2023 Congress in Boston, MA USA

2023 ISAKOS Biennial Congress Paper

 

What Imaging is Required to Plan TKA? A Comparison Between EOS and CT Scan to Assess Coronal Alignment

Justin P. Roe, MB BS BSc(Med) Hons FRACS, A/Prof., Sydney, NSW AUSTRALIA
James Corbett, MBBS, Sydney, New South Wales AUSTRALIA
Jeffrey Yong Yau Tai, MD, Kensington, NSW AUSTRALIA
Lucy J. Salmon, PhD, Sydney, NSW AUSTRALIA

North Sydney Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Centre, Sydney, New South Wales, AUSTRALIA

FDA Status Cleared

Summary

CT demonstrates excellent reliability for assessing coronal lower limb alignment compared to EOS in osteoarthritic knees. This supports the routine use of CT to plan TKA without further weight bearing imaging in routine cases.

Abstract

Background

As surgical technologies and alignment strategies develop, accuracy of lower limb alignment assessment gains increasing importance. The current gold standard remains long leg (4ft) radiographs. Other measures include CT and EOS scans. This study aims to compare CT scanogram and EOS long leg views to determine the reliability of assessment of HKA in native knees.

Materials And Methods

A retrospective study of 96 knees in patients undergoing TKA was performed comparing HKA alignment data from EOS and CT scanogram. Coronal HKA and sagittal flexion angle were assessed by two independent observers at two time points.
Inter-observer correlation was calculated.

Results

The mean difference of HKA between the 2 imaging modalities was 0.09° ± 2.4°. 12 knees (13%) exceeded a CT vs EOS difference of 3°. Inter-rater reliability was excellent with intra-class coefficients >0.9. The mean difference between CT and EOS was significantly greater for patients with fixed flexion >10° (0.68) vs <10 deg (-0.2) p=0.004. Mean difference in HKA did not differ between those 0-10° varus and >10° varus (p=0.273). Valgus HKA had a higher mean difference (1.9°) compared to varus knees (-0.4°) (p=0.001).

Conclusion

CT scanogram and EOS showed excellent inter-rater reliability and correlated well. Increased sagittal plane deformity does effect coronal HKA assessment. Extreme varus did not affect the mean difference significantly while valgus did. For the majority of patients CT scanogram will give a reliable assessment of HKA but beware those with significant valgus or sagittal deformity where additional imaging may be necessary to plan TKA.