2025 ISAKOS Congress in Munich, Germany

2025 ISAKOS Biennial Congress Paper

 

Could A Three-Dimensional Contralateral Meniscus Segmentation For Allograft Or Scaffold Sizing Be Possible? A Prospective Study

Jérôme Valcarenghi, MD, Quevaucamps BELGIUM
Jacques Hernigou, MD, Baudour BELGIUM
Esfandiar Chahidi, Nivelles BELGIUM
Xavier Collard, MD, Mons BELGIUM
Rene E. Verdonk, Prof Em, MD, PhD, Gent BELGIUM

CHU Helora - Site Kennedy , Mons , Hainaut, BELGIUM

FDA Status Not Applicable

Summary

The contralateral side could be used as a template for the 3D sizing of meniscal allografts or meniscal implants.

Abstract

Purpose

Meniscal allografts and biodegradable meniscal implants are attractive surgical options for painful subtotal or total meniscectomies. In order to get the best results, these should be as similar as possible to the original meniscus in terms of shape, structure, and volume. Three-dimensional meniscus sizing could be an approach to improve the accuracy of meniscus matching. Therefore, the aims of this study were to perform a comparative morphological and volumetric analysis of the healthy meniscus based on manual tri-planar segmentation and to demonstrate that the menisci from the contralateral knee could be used as a reference in the sizing of a meniscal graft or a scaffold.

Methods

Three-dimensional meniscal models were created based on 120 MRIs in 60 healthy subjects (bilateral knees). The differences between the pairs of menisci concerning the widths, thicknesses, lateromedial distances, anteroposterior distances, angles of coverage, and meniscal volumes were evaluated. T-Student tests were used to compare the quantitative numerical variables of the different groups. Pearson’s linear regression was used to determine if correlations existed between demographic variables (age, gender, height, weight) and anatomical parameters. Statistical significance was set at p < 0.05.

Results

Comparing the 120 pairs of menisci of each subject, there was no statistically significant difference for all parameters studied for both the medial and lateral meniscus. When the measurements were stratified by gender, statistically significant differences were observed for all parameters except meniscal coverage angles. We observed that anteroposterior and latero- medial distances were positively correlated with height and body mass index both at the level of the medial meniscus (r = 0.68; r = 0.66; r = 0.65; and r = 0.63) and lateral (r = 0.68; r = 0.69; r = 0.61; and r = 0.60).

Conclusion

Our study demonstrated that the intra-individual 3D shapes of the left and right menisci are very similar. There- fore, the contralateral side could be used as a template for the 3D sizing of meniscal allografts or meniscal implants.