Title of article :
Can 3D surgical planning and patient specific instrumentation reduce hip implant inventory? A prospective study
Author/Authors :
Di Laura, Anna The Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital - Brockley Hill - Stanmore - London, UK , Henckel, Johann The Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital - Brockley Hill - Stanmore - London, UK , Hothi, Harry The Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital - Brockley Hill - Stanmore - London, UK , Hart, Alister The Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital - Brockley Hill - Stanmore - London, UK
Abstract :
Modern designs of joint replacements require a large inventory of components to be available during
surgery. Pre-operative CT imaging aids 3D surgical planning and implant sizing, which should reduce the inventory
size and enhance clinical outcome. We aimed to better understand the impact of the use of 3D surgical planning
and Patient Specific Instrumentation (PSI) on hip implant inventory.
Methods: An initial feasibility study of 25 consecutive cases was undertaken to assess the discrepancy between the
planned component sizes and those implanted to determine whether it was possible to reduce the inventory for
future cases. Following this, we performed a pilot study to investigate the effect of an optimized inventory stock on
the surgical outcome: we compared a group of 20 consecutive cases (experimental) with the 25 cases in the
feasibility study (control). We assessed: (1) accuracy of the 3D planning system in predicting size (%); (2) inventory
size changes (%); (3) intra and post-operative complications.
Results: The feasibility study showed variability within 1 size range, enabling us to safely optimize inventory stock
for the pilot study. (1) 3D surgical planning correctly predicted sizes in 93% of the femoral and 89% of the
acetabular cup components; (2) there was a 61% reduction in the implant inventory size; (3) we recorded good
surgical outcomes with no difference between the 2 groups, and all patients had appropriately sized implants.
Conclusions: 3D planning is accurate in up to 95% of the cases. CT-based planning can reduce inventory size in
the hospital setting potentially leading to a reduction in costs.
Keywords :
Implant inventory , Total hip Arthroplasty , Preoperative planning , Three-dimensional computerised planning , Implant cost
Journal title :
3D Printing in Medicine