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Comparison of Anatomically Aligned and Conventional Total Knee Arthroplasty in the Same Patients

T

The Catholic University of Korea

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Anatomically Aligned Total Knee Arthroplasty
Knee Osteoarthritis

Treatments

Device: Anatomically aligned total knee arthroplasty implant

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04181216
Anatomically aligned TKRA

Details and patient eligibility

About

Total knee arthroplasty(TKA) is a successful orthopedic surgery with excellent clinical outcome and survival. However, there are concerns about patient satisfaction in previous reports, and dissatisfaction rate of 15-30% is reported in clinical outcomes(PROMs) of some studies. Therefore, for improving the patient's outcome and satisfaction after total knee arthroplasty, it is necessary to change the design of the conventional total knee arthroplsaty implant. The knee is a joint structure with several dynamic functions, and not only the skeletal structure but also the soft tissue balance plays an important role in the function of the knee joint. New implants are being developed to overcome the limitations of conventional TKA implant, including the Journey II Bi-cruciate substituting total knee system (JII-BCS; Smith & Nephew). JII-BCS implant has normal articular geometry, more anatomical femoral shape, lateral tibial convex geometry, and asymmetrical tibial plateau, anterior and posterior cams, which has been shown in experimental studies to produce nearly normal knee movement by reproducing the actual normal anatomical alignment in vivo.

The clinical results of the kinematic effects of this anatomcally aligned change are insufficient, and there is also a lack of comparative studies with conventional total knee arthroplasty implant. The purpose of this study is to compare outcomes between anatomically aligned TKA(JII-BCS) and conventional TKA(Legion total knee system, Smith & Nephew). This study is a randomized controlled study in patients undergoing total knee arthroplasty per day. Radiologic parameter, patients preference and clinical results was investigated in both knee of same patients who received TKA during minimum 2 year follow up.

Enrollment

100 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

19+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients for bilateral total knee arthroplasty
  • having medicare insurance

Exclusion criteria

  • Rheumatoid arthritis
  • Other inflammatory arthritis
  • Crystal-induced arthritis
  • Septic arthritis
  • Neuropsychiatric patients
  • Previous knee operation history
  • Neuropsychiatric patients
  • Patients with preoperative severe limitation of motion (Flexion contracture ≥ 20, range of motion ≤ 90)
  • Patients with preoperative severe defomity of knee alignment (Varus or valgus angle ≥ 15)
  • Severe obese patients (BMI ≥ 40)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

100 participants in 2 patient groups

anatomically aligned total knee arthroplasty prosthesis
Experimental group
Description:
Total knee arthroplasty with anatomically aligned total knee arthroplasty implant (Journey II Bi-cruciate substituting total knee system, JII-BCS, Smith \& Nephew)
Treatment:
Device: Anatomically aligned total knee arthroplasty implant
Conventaional total knee arthroplasty group
Active Comparator group
Description:
Total knee arthroplasty with conventional total knee arthroplasty implant (Legion total knee system, Smith \& Nephew)
Treatment:
Device: Anatomically aligned total knee arthroplasty implant

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Central trial contact

Yong In, MD, PhD; Mansoo Kim, MD, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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