肿瘤切除术后同种异体骨重建是徒手操作、患者特定器械还是手术导航效果更好?临床前合成骨研究。

IF 4.2 2区 医学 Q1 ORTHOPEDICS Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research® Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Epub Date: 2024-05-15 DOI:10.1097/CORR.0000000000003116
Harley H L Chan, Prakash Nayak, Ibrahim Alshaygy, Kenneth R Gundle, Kim Tsoi, Michael J Daly, Jonathan C Irish, Peter C Ferguson, Jay S Wunder
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:由于关节周围骨肿瘤具有复杂的几何形状,因此保全关节切除术具有挑战性。在肿瘤切除术后,为了成功重建关节周围骨缺损,通常采用结构性同种异体移植物来保留关节。问题/目的:(1) 徒手法、患者专用器械法和手术导航法的心理工作量是否存在差异?(2) 不同方法在一致性(与理想植骨的偏差的定量测量)、重建过程中的耗时以及对同种异体移植重建匹配度的定性评估方面是否存在差异?七名外科医生按照相同的顺序使用三种方法(徒手、患者专用器械和手术导航)制作合成骨,重建标准化骨缺损。美国国家航空航天局(NASA)心理任务负荷指数调查问卷和手术时间都被记录下来。成形异体骨的锥形束 CT 图像用于测量与计算机生成的理想植骨模型的一致性(对与理想植骨偏差的定量测量)。另外六名(资深)外科医生在对手术方式保密的情况下,使用 10 分李克特量表对异体骨移植到标准化肿瘤缺损中的吻合质量进行评分。我们使用均方根(单位:毫米)测量一致性,并使用方差分析进行多对比较(P < 0.05 为显著):结果:徒手、患者专用器械和手术导航技术的精神NASA总任务负荷得分没有差异。我们发现手术导航(2±0 毫米;平均值已四舍五入为整数)和患者专用器械(2±1 毫米)的一致性均方根值(平均值±标准差)没有差异,但与徒手方法(3±1 毫米)相比,两者都有小幅改善。徒手与手术导航相比,平均差异为 1 毫米(95% 置信区间 [CI] 0.5 至 1.1;P = 0.01)。自由操作与患者专用器械的平均差异为 1 毫米(95% 置信区间 [CI] -0.1 至 0.9;P = 0.02)。患者专用器械与手术导航的平均差异为 0 毫米(95% CI -0.5 至 0.2;p = 0.82)。在评估塑形移植物的拟合度时,我们发现手术导航(中位数[IQR] 7 [6至8])与患者特异性器械治疗(中位数 6 [5至7.8])之间没有临床上重要的差异,尽管这两种技术的得分都高于徒手技术(中位数 3 [2至4])。自由操作与手术导航的中位数相差 4(P < 0.001)。自由操作与患者专用器械相比,中位数相差 3(P < 0.001)。患者专用器械与手术导航的中位数差异为 1(p = 0.03)。徒手操作的平均手术时间为(16 ± 10)分钟,患者特异性器械操作为(14 ± 9)分钟,手术导航技术为(24 ± 8)分钟。我们发现三种塑形方式的手术时间没有差异(徒手与患者特异性器械:平均差异为 2 分钟 [95% CI 0 至 7];P = 0.92;徒手与手术导航:平均差异为 8 分钟 [95% CI 0 至 20];P = 0.23;患者特异性器械与手术导航:平均差异为 10 分钟 [95% CI 1 至 19];P = 0.12):根据手术模拟重建肿瘤切除术后的标准化关节周围骨缺损,我们发现手术导航与患者特异性器械相比,在定性拟合方面可能略有优势,但两种技术都能提供比徒手技术稍好的异型移植物拟合标准化肿瘤切除术后骨缺损的一致性。要确定这些差异是否具有临床意义,还需要进一步研究。本文介绍的手术导航系统是实验室研究开发的产物,虽然还不能广泛应用于临床实践,但目前正在研究手术室用于患者护理。这项新技术涉及学习曲线、资本成本和潜在风险。所报告的初步结果是基于临床前的合成骨肿瘤研究,与实际手术场景相比并不真实:手术导航系统是骨科和重建外科的新兴技术,了解其功能和局限性对临床实践至关重要。
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Does Freehand, Patient-specific Instrumentation or Surgical Navigation Perform Better for Allograft Reconstruction After Tumor Resection? A Preclinical Synthetic Bone Study.

Background: Joint-sparing resection of periarticular bone tumors can be challenging because of complex geometry. Successful reconstruction of periarticular bone defects after tumor resection is often performed with structural allografts to allow for joint preservation. However, achieving a size-matched allograft to fill the defect can be challenging because allograft sizes vary, they do not always match a patient's anatomy, and cutting the allograft to perfectly fit the defect is demanding.

Questions/purposes: (1) Is there a difference in mental workload among the freehand, patient-specific instrumentation, and surgical navigation approaches? (2) Is there a difference in conformance (quantitative measure of deviation from the ideal bone graft), elapsed time during reconstruction, and qualitative assessment of goodness-of-fit of the allograft reconstruction among the approaches?

Methods: Seven surgeons used three modalities in the same order (freehand, patient-specific instrumentation, and surgical navigation) to fashion synthetic bone to reconstruct a standardized bone defect. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) mental task load index questionnaires and procedure time were captured. Cone-beam CT images of the shaped allografts were used to measure conformance (quantitative measure of deviation from the ideal bone graft) to a computer-generated ideal bone graft model. Six additional (senior) surgeons blinded to modality scored the quality of fit of the allografts into the standardized tumor defect using a 10-point Likert scale. We measured conformance using the root-mean-square metric in mm and used ANOVA for multipaired comparisons (p < 0.05 was significant).

Results: There was no difference in mental NASA total task load scores among the freehand, patient-specific instrumentation, and surgical navigation techniques. We found no difference in conformance root-mean-square values (mean ± SD) between surgical navigation (2 ± 0 mm; mean values have been rounded to whole numbers) and patient-specific instrumentation (2 ± 1 mm), but both showed a small improvement compared with the freehand approach (3 ± 1 mm). For freehand versus surgical navigation, the mean difference was 1 mm (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.5 to 1.1; p = 0.01). For freehand versus patient-specific instrumentation, the mean difference was 1 mm (95% CI -0.1 to 0.9; p = 0.02). For patient-specific instrumentation versus surgical navigation, the mean difference was 0 mm (95% CI -0.5 to 0.2; p = 0.82). In evaluating the goodness of fit of the shaped grafts, we found no clinically important difference between surgical navigation (median [IQR] 7 [6 to 8]) and patient-specific instrumentation (median 6 [5 to 7.8]), although both techniques had higher scores than the freehand technique did (median 3 [2 to 4]). For freehand versus surgical navigation, the difference of medians was 4 (p < 0.001). For freehand versus patient-specific instrumentation, the difference of medians was 3 (p < 0.001). For patient-specific instrumentation versus surgical navigation, the difference of medians was 1 (p = 0.03). The mean ± procedural times for freehand was 16 ± 10 minutes, patient-specific instrumentation was 14 ± 9 minutes, and surgical navigation techniques was 24 ± 8 minutes. We found no differences in procedure times across three shaping modalities (freehand versus patient-specific instrumentation: mean difference 2 minutes [95% CI 0 to 7]; p = 0.92; freehand versus surgical navigation: mean difference 8 minutes [95% CI 0 to 20]; p = 0.23; patient-specific instrumentation versus surgical navigation: mean difference 10 minutes [95% CI 1 to 19]; p = 0.12).

Conclusion: Based on surgical simulation to reconstruct a standardized periarticular bone defect after tumor resection, we found a possible small advantage to surgical navigation over patient-specific instrumentation based on qualitative fit, but both techniques provided slightly better conformance of the shaped graft for fit into the standardized post-tumor resection bone defect than the freehand technique did. To determine whether these differences are clinically meaningful requires further study. The surgical navigation system presented here is a product of laboratory research development, and although not ready to be widely deployed for clinical practice, it is currently being used in a research operating room setting for patient care. This new technology is associated with a learning curve, capital costs, and potential risk. The reported preliminary results are based on a preclinical synthetic bone tumor study, which is not as realistic as actual surgical scenarios.

Clinical relevance: Surgical navigation systems are an emerging technology in orthopaedic and reconstruction surgery, and understanding their capabilities and limitations is paramount for clinical practice. Given our preliminary findings in a small cohort study with one scenario of standardized synthetic periarticular bone tumor defects, future investigations should include different surgical scenarios using allograft and cadaveric specimens in a more realistic surgical setting.

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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.
期刊最新文献
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