| Literature DB >> 26753122 |
Mohammed Hadi1, Tim Barlow1, Imran Ahmed1, Mark Dunbar1, Peter McCulloch2, Damian Griffin1.
Abstract
To ensure implant durability following Modern total knee replacement (TKR) surgery, one long held principle in condylar total knee arthroplasty is positioning the components in alignment with the mechanical axis and restoring the overall limb alignment to 180° ± 3°. However, this view has been challenged recently. Given the high number of TKR performed, clarity on this integral aspect of the procedure is necessary. To investigate the association between malalignment following primary TKR and revision rates. A systematic review of the literature was conducted using a computerised literature search of Medline, CINHAL, and EMBASE to identify English-language studies published from 2000 through to 2014. Studies with adequate information on the correlation between malalignment and revision rate with a minimum follow-up of 6 months were considered for inclusion. A study protocol, including the detailed search strategy was published on the PROSPERO database for systematic reviews. From an initial 2107 citations, eight studies, with variable methodological qualities, were eligible for inclusion. Collectively, nine parameters of alignment were studied, and 20 assessments were made between an alignment parameter and revision rate. Four out of eight studies demonstrated an association between a malalignment parameter and increased revision rates. In the coronal plane, only three studies assessed the mechanical axis. None of these studies found an association with revision rates, whereas four of the five studies investigating the anatomical axis found an association between malalignment and increased revision rate. This study demonstrates the effect of malalignment on revision rates is likely to be modest. Interestingly, studies that used mechanical alignment in the coronal plane demonstrated no association with revision rates. This questions the premise of patient specific instrumentation devices based on the mechanically aligned knee when considering revision as the endpoint.Entities:
Keywords: Malalignment; Revision rate; Systematic review; Total knee arthroplasty
Year: 2015 PMID: 26753122 PMCID: PMC4695472 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-015-1604-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Fig. 1Radiological assessment quality (RAQ) criteria for assessing alignment. The evaluation was done using a five yes/no question checklist that was devised for this review. A sensitivity analysis was performed to determine if the quality of the radiological methods was an important factor in the outcome. The rationale for each set of questions was as follows: The suitability of the imaging modality used: Overall limb alignment is better assessed on a whole leg radiograph compared to a short film radiographs (Moreland 1988) and Short film x-rays are used for the assessment of component’s anatomical alignment (Morgan et al. 2008). The timing of the imaging: Malalignment on images acquired several years following surgery may be secondary to implant subsidence/migration (Morgan et al. 2008). The patient’s weight bearing status at the time of imaging: the relationship between the bony and soft tissue parts of the knee joint is most visible during stressing manoeuvre such as weight bearing (Nicoll and Rowley 2010). Indication of standardisation when acquiring the images: Non-standardised protocols for acquiring images can result in inconsistent magnification and rotation, introducing a source of bias (Parratte et al. 2010; Registry 2013). Evidence of rater reliability when assessing the images for alignment: To ensure consistency (Parratte et al. 2010; Registry 2013)
Fig. 2PRISMA flow diagram including the details of our search results for this review. Figure shows the reasons behind study exclusion at each stage of the search and the number of studies identified at each point of the search
A table demonstrating key characteristics of the studies selected for review
| Author | Study design | Sample size | Follow up (mean range) | Number of patients lost to follow up | Final study sample size | Quality assessment score | Judgement risk on bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Berend et al. ( | Case series | 8598 (5535) from database | 5 years | 3152 (2125). 41 tibial failures were analysed | AHRQ—All four factors were present | Low risk | |
| Fang et al. ( | Case series | 6070 (3992) from database | 6.6 years | 1118 (28.0 %) patients died | 6277 | AHRQ—All four factors were present | Low risk |
| Ritter et al. ( | Case series | 9483 | 7.6 ± 3.8 years | 3404 | 6079 | AHRQ—All four factors were present | Low risk |
| Kim et al. ( | Case series | 3150 | 15.8 years | 102 | 3048 | AHRQ—three out of four factors present | Low risk |
| Morgan et al. ( | Case series | 197 | 9 years | No mention | 197 | AHRQ—two out of four factors present | Unclear/high risk |
| Parratte et al. ( | Case control | 417 | Minimum 15 years | 19 | 398 | Ottawa—Newcastle score eight | Low risk |
| Bonner et al. ( | Case control | 501 | 9.8 years | 184 (died before last review, however, survival data included in analysis) | 458 | Ottawa—Newcastle score seven | Low risk |
| Magnussen et al. ( | Case control | 608 | Median 4.7 years | 55 | 553 | Ottawa—Newcastle score seven | Low risk |
Fig. 3A diagrammatic representation of different alignment parameters based on the knee society total knee arthroplasty roentgenographic evaluation and scoring system24. The coronal tibiofemoral mechanical angle is the angle resulting from drawing a line from the centre of the femoral head down to centre of the ankle through the centre of the knee (a)—ideally 180°. The coronal femoral angle cFA (b)—ideally 96°—and coronal tibial angle cTA (c)—ideally 90°—are the angles between the components’ coronal axes (the line connecting the femoral components most distal condyles and the line along the horizontal tibial plate) and the bones’ coronal anatomical axes (line which bisects the medullary canal of the femur and tibia respectively). The coronal tibiofemoral anatomical angle is a combination of the coronal anatomical femoral axis and coronal anatomical tibial axis (d). The sagittal femoral sFA (e)—ideally 90°—and sagittal tibial sTA (f)— ideally between 83 and 90°—angles are the angles between the components’ sagittal axes (horizontal line perpendicular to the femoral component peg and line along the horizontal tibial plate) and the anatomical sagittal bones’ axes (line which bisects the medullary canal of the femur and tibia respectively). The axial femoral (aFRA) (g)—ideally 0°—and axial tibial—ideally within 15°—(aTRA) (h) angles are the angles between the components’ axial axes (line through the centre of the femoral pegs and the line through the most posterior points of the tibial plate on axial views respectively) and the bones’ axial axes (surgical epicondylar femoral axis and the tibial tuberosity axis respectively). The combined components axial (aCRA) rotational alignment angles—ideally 0°—is the angle between the components axial axes
Studies radiological methods quality assessment
| Modality of imaging | Timing of imaging | Weight bearing | Protocol/standardisation | Rater reliability assessment | Outcome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Berend et al. ( | SLR | At follow up | Y | U | N | High risk |
| Bonner et al. ( | LLR | 6 months | Y | Standardised | N | Low risk |
| Fang et al. ( | SLR | Varied | Y | Y | N | High risk |
| Kim et al. ( | CT, LLR | 1 week | Y | Y | Y | Low risk |
| Magnussen et al. ( | LLR | Follow up | Y | YRoutine for Database | Y | Low risk |
| Morgan et al. ( | LLR | Immediate post op | Y | Y | N | low risk |
| Parratte et al. ( | LLR | 2–3 month post op | Y | YStandardised protocol | Y | Low risk |
| Ritter et al. ( | SLR | Latest follow up |
| U | N | High Risk |
Assessment of radiological methods used to assess alignment for this review. We devised a five point checklist (Fig. 1) and all studies were assessed using this checklist to identify whether they were high/low risk. CT computerised tomography, LLR Long leg radiograph, SLR Short leg radiograph, Y yes, N No, U Unknown
Tibio-femoral mechanical angle malalignment (cTFmA)
| Author | RAQ criteria for radiological bias | Association between malalignment and worse outcome | Sample size | Alignment data | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parratte et al. | Low risk | No | 398 | 292 knees classed as mechanically aligned 0° ± 3. 10 knees in the outlier group (beyond 0° ÷ 3° | 15.4 % revision rate in the mechanically aligned group. 13 % in the outlier group (p = 0.88). No association between malalignment and revision |
| Bonner et al. | Low risk | No | 458 | 372 knees were classified as mechanically aligned (0° ± 3°). 86 knees were within the malaligned group | 33 revisions for aseptic loosening. Kaplan–Meier survival analysis showed a weak tendency towards improved survival with restoration of a neutral mechanical axis, |
| Magnussen et al. ( | Low risk | No | 553 | 181 patients were in varus alignment, 352 were in neutral alignment and 20 were in valgus alignment | No |
Studies investigating association between coronal malalignment and revision rates
| Author | RAQ criteria for radiological bias | Association between malalignment and worse outcome | Sample size | Alignment data | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tibial angle malalignment (cTA) | |||||
| Berend et al. ( | High risk | Yes | 3152 | 376 knees had >3° varus alignment | 21 revisions due to medial bone collapse all in relative varus. Tibial component with >3° varus had |
| Fang et al. ( | High risk | Yes | 6277 | Individual tibial alignment figures not stated | 2.8 times increased risk of failure by medial tibial collapse |
| Ritter et al. ( | High risk | Yes | 6079 | 81.9 % knees defined as neutral. Neutral defined as ≥90° | 3.2 % failure rate |
| Kim et al. ( | Low risk | Yes | 3048 | 2168 knees neutrally aligned (90°), 880 varus (<90°) | Varus knees associated with higher revision rate p < 0.0001 |
| Magnussen et al. ( | Low risk | No | 553 | 35 knees in varus514 knees neutralFour knees in valgus alignment | All |
| Femoral angle malalignment (cFa) | |||||
| Ritter et al. ( | High risk | Yes | 6079 | Neutral defined as any angle ≥8 valgus. 91.6 % neutral | 7.8 % failure rate associated with valgus malalignment |
| Kim et al. ( | Low risk | Yes | 3048 | 2858 knees alignment was 2.0–8.0° valgus (neutrally aligned group), in 160 knees the alignment was <2.0° valgus (varus aligned group), and in 58 knees the alignment was >8.0° valgus (valgus aligned group) |
|
| Magnussen et al. ( | Low risk | No | 553 | 24 knees in varus513 knees neutral16 knees in valgus alignment | All |
| Tibio-femoral anatomical angle malalignment (cTFaA) | |||||
| Berend et al. ( | High risk | Yes | 3152 |
| Varus tibial component alignment >3° (Hazard Ratio 17.2, p < 0.0001) associated with tibial implant failureOverall varus limb alignment associated with failure |
| Fang et al. ( | High risk | Yes | 6277 | Mean postoperative | The revision rate for the neutral alignment group was significantly lower at 0.5 % (21/4029), compared to 1.8 % (18/1222) for the varus group (p = 0.0017) and 1.5 % (12/819) for the valgus group (p = 0.0028) |
| Ritter et al. ( | High risk | Yes | 6079 | Neutral defined as 2.5–7.471 % neutral | 8.7 % failure rate when tibial component <90° and femoral component ≥8° valgus p < 0.0001 |
| Kim et al. ( | Low risk | Yes | 3048 | 1928 neutrally aligned (3–7.5° valgus), 664 varus aligned (<3° valgus) and 456 valgus aligned (>7.5°) |
|
| Morgan et al. ( | Low risk | No | 197 | 73 neutral (4–9° valgus)58 valgus (>9°)66 varus (<4.9°) | Six revisions overall. |
Studies investigating the association between implants’ sagittal malalignment and revision rates (sTA, sFA)
| Author | RAQ criteria for radiological bias | Association between malalignment and worse outcome | Sample size | Alignment data | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kim et al. ( | Low risk | Yes | 3048 |
| No revisions in neutral group. 25 (3.3 %) revisions in the flexion group (p = 0.0029). 5 (0.9 %) revisions in the extension group (p = 0.2) |
|
| Five revisions in neutrally aligned group. 25 revisions in the abnormally aligned group (p < 0.0001) |
Studies investigating the association between implants’ axial malalignment and revision rates (aTRA, aFRA, aTFMA/aTFCA)
| Author | RAQ criteria for radiological bias | Association between malalignment and worse outcome | Sample size | Alignment data | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kim et al. ( | Low risk | Yes | 3048 |
| No revisions required for the 2–5° external rotation group. 27 revisions in the <2° external rotation group (p < 0.0001) and 3 revisions in the >5° group (p = 0.029) |
|
| 1 revision required for the 2–5° external rotation group. 27 revisions in the <2° external rotation group (p < 0.0001) and 2 revisions in the >5° group (p = 0.034) |