Kinematic Alignment Does Not Result in Clinically Important Improvements After TKA Compared With Mechanical Alignment: A Meta-analysis of Randomized Trials.

IF 4.2 2区 医学 Q1 ORTHOPEDICS
Nicholas Nucci, Moyukh Chakrabarti, Zachary DeVries, Seper Ekhtiari, Sebastian Tomescu, Raman Mundi
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: There is debate as to whether kinematic TKA or mechanical alignment TKA is superior. Recent systematic reviews have suggested that kinematically aligned TKAs may be the preferred option. However, the observed differences in alignment favoring kinematic alignment may not improve outcomes (performance or durability) in ways that patients can perceive, and likewise, statistical differences in outcome scores sometimes observed in clinical trials may be too small for patients to notice. Minimum clinically important differences (MCIDs) are changes that are deemed meaningful to the patient. A meta-analysis of randomized trials that frames results on this topic in terms of MCIDs may therefore be informative to surgeons and their patients.

Questions/purposes: (1) Does kinematic alignment for TKA insertion improve patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) by clinically important margins (for example, 5 points of 48 on the adjusted Oxford Knee Score [OKS] or 13.7 points of 100 on the Forgotten Joint Score [FJS]) compared with mechanical alignment? (2) Does kinematic alignment for TKA insertion improve ROM by a clinically important margin (defined as 3.8° to 6.4° in flexion) compared with mechanical alignment?

Methods: A systematic review of Medline and Embase databases was performed from inception to January 29, 2023, the date of search. We identified RCTs comparing mechanical alignment TKA with kinematic alignment TKA. All English-language RCTs comparing PROMs data in kinematic versus mechanical alignment TKAs performed in patients 18 years or older were included. Studies that were not in English, involved overlapping reports of the same trial, and/or utilized nonrandomized controlled trial methodology were excluded. Conference abstracts or study protocols, pilot studies, and review articles were also excluded. Two reviewers screened abstracts, full-text, and extracted data and assessed included studies for risk of bias using the Cochrane Risk of Bias tool, version 2. Twelve randomized controlled trials (RCTs) were identified, which included 1033 patients with a mean age of 68 years (range 40 to 94) from eight countries who were undergoing primary TKA. Six studies were determined to be low risk of bias, with the remaining six studies determined to be of moderate-to-high risk of bias. As a result, we would expect that the included studies might overestimate the benefit of the newer approach. Outcomes included ROM and PROMs. Where feasible, pooled analysis was completed. PROMs data were extracted from nine pooled studies, with a randomized n = 443 in the kinematic alignment group and n = 435 in the mechanical alignment group. ROM data were extracted from six pooled studies, with randomized n = 248 in the kinematic alignment group and n = 243 in the mechanical alignment group. PROMS were converted to common scales where possible. Multiple versions of the OKS exist; therefore, OKS scores were converted if needed to a 0 to 48 Oxford scale, in which higher scores represent better clinical outcomes. WOMAC scores were converted to OKS using previously reported techniques. The OKS and converted WOMAC scores were represented as "functional scores" in our data set because of their conversion. An MCID of 5 was utilized as previously documented for the OKS. Heterogeneity was assessed using the I 2 statistic, and for an I 2 of > 25%, random-effects models were utilized.

Results: In nine pooled studies, we found no clinically important difference between the kinematic and mechanical alignment groups in terms of our generated functional score (mean difference 3 of possible 48 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.81 to 4.54]; p = 0.005). The functional score included OKS and WOMAC scores converted to OKS. The difference did not exceed the MCID for the OKS. In three pooled studies, we found no difference between the kinematic and mechanical alignment groups in terms of FJS at 1 to 2 years (mean difference 4 of possible 200 [95% CI -1.77 to 9.08]; p = 0.19). In three pooled studies, we found no difference between the kinematic and mechanical alignment groups in terms of EuroQol 5-domain instrument VAS score at 1 to 2 years (mean difference 0.2 of possible 100 [95% CI -3.17 to 3.61]; p = 0.90). We found no clinically meaningful difference between kinematic TKA and mechanical alignment TKA for ROM (extension mean difference 0.1° [95% CI -1.08 to 1.34]; p = 0.83, and flexion mean difference 3° [95% CI 0.5 to 5.61]; p = 0.02).

Conclusion: This meta-analysis found no clinically important benefit favoring kinematic over mechanical alignment in TKA based on the available RCTs. Because patients cannot perceive advantages to kinematic alignment, and because it adds costs, time (if using advanced technologies), and potential risks to the patient that are associated with novelty, it should not be widely adopted in practice until or unless such advantages have been shown in well-designed RCTs.

Level of evidence: Level I, therapeutic study.

一项随机试验的荟萃分析:与机械对齐相比,TKA后运动学对齐不会导致临床上重要的改善。
背景:关于运动学TKA和机械对齐TKA孰优孰劣一直存在争议。最近的系统综述表明,运动学对齐的tka可能是首选方案。然而,观察到的有利于运动对齐的排列差异可能不会以患者可以感知的方式改善结果(性能或耐久性),同样,在临床试验中有时观察到的结果评分的统计差异可能太小,患者无法注意到。最小临床重要差异(MCIDs)是被认为对患者有意义的变化。因此,一项随机试验的荟萃分析可以为外科医生及其患者提供有关MCIDs的信息。问题/目的:(1)与机械对齐相比,TKA插入的运动学对齐是否通过临床重要的边缘(例如,调整后的牛津膝关节评分[OKS]为48分中的5分或遗忘关节评分[FJS]为100分中的13.7分)改善了患者报告的结果测量(PROMs) ?(2)与机械对齐相比,TKA插入的运动学对齐是否改善了临床上重要的ROM(定义为屈曲3.8°至6.4°)?方法:对Medline和Embase数据库自建立至2023年1月29日(检索日期)进行系统回顾。我们确定了比较机械定位TKA和运动定位TKA的随机对照试验。所有比较18岁及以上患者进行运动学与机械对齐tka的PROMs数据的英文随机对照试验均被纳入。非英文、涉及同一试验的重叠报告和/或使用非随机对照试验方法的研究被排除在外。会议摘要或研究方案、初步研究和综述文章也被排除在外。两位审稿人筛选摘要、全文和提取的数据,并使用Cochrane风险偏倚工具(version 2)评估纳入的研究的偏倚风险。纳入了12项随机对照试验(rct),其中包括来自8个国家的1033例平均年龄为68岁(范围40至94岁)的原发性TKA患者。6项研究被确定为低偏倚风险,其余6项研究被确定为中至高偏倚风险。因此,我们预计纳入的研究可能高估了新方法的益处。结果包括ROM和prom。在可行的情况下,完成汇总分析。从9项合并研究中提取PROMs数据,其中运动学对齐组随机n = 443,机械对齐组随机n = 435。ROM数据从6个合并研究中提取,随机选择n = 248的运动学对齐组和n = 243的机械对齐组。在可能的情况下,prom被转换成通用刻度。存在多个版本的OKS;因此,如果需要,OKS分数被转换为0到48的牛津量表,分数越高代表临床结果越好。使用先前报道的技术将WOMAC评分转换为OKS。OKS和转换后的WOMAC分数在我们的数据集中表示为“功能分数”,因为它们进行了转换。如先前为OKS记录的那样,使用了5的MCID。采用I2统计量评估异质性,I2为> 25%时采用随机效应模型。结果:在9项合并研究中,我们发现运动学和机械对齐组在我们生成的功能评分方面没有临床上重要的差异(48个可能的平均差异为3[95%可信区间(CI) 0.81至4.54];P = 0.005)。功能评分包括OKS和WOMAC评分转化为OKS。对于OKS,差异没有超过MCID。在三个合并研究中,我们发现运动学组和机械组在1至2年的FJS方面没有差异(平均差异为4 / 200)[95% CI -1.77至9.08];P = 0.19)。在三项合并研究中,我们发现运动学和机械对齐组在1至2年的EuroQol 5域仪器VAS评分方面没有差异(平均差异为0.2,可能为100 [95% CI -3.17至3.61];P = 0.90)。我们发现ROM的运动学TKA和机械对齐TKA没有临床意义的差异(延伸平均差0.1°[95% CI -1.08至1.34];p = 0.83,屈曲平均差3°[95% CI 0.5 ~ 5.61];P = 0.02)。结论:本荟萃分析发现,根据现有的随机对照试验,在全膝关节置换术中运动学比对机械对齐没有重要的临床益处。由于患者无法感知到运动学对齐的优势,并且由于它增加了成本、时间(如果使用先进技术)以及与新颖性相关的患者潜在风险,因此在设计良好的随机对照试验显示出这些优势之前,不应在实践中广泛采用。证据等级:一级,治疗性研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
11.90%
发文量
722
审稿时长
2.5 months
期刊介绍: Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research® is a leading peer-reviewed journal devoted to the dissemination of new and important orthopaedic knowledge. CORR® brings readers the latest clinical and basic research, along with columns, commentaries, and interviews with authors.
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