Surgical technique: Computer-generated custom jigs improve accuracy of wide resection of bone tumors Journal Article


Authors: Khan, F. A.; Lipman, J. D.; Pearle, A. D.; Boland, P. J.; Healey, J. H.
Article Title: Surgical technique: Computer-generated custom jigs improve accuracy of wide resection of bone tumors
Abstract: Manual techniques of reproducing a preoperative plan for primary bone tumor resection using rudimentary devices and imprecise localization techniques can result in compromised margins or unnecessary removal of unaffected tissue. We examined whether a novel technique using computer-generated custom jigs more accurately reproduces a preoperative resection plan than a standard manual technique. Using CT images and advanced imaging, reverse engineering, and computer-assisted design software, custom jigs were designed to precisely conform to a specific location on the surface of partially skeletonized cadaveric femurs. The jigs were used to perform a hemimetaphyseal resection. We performed CT scans on six matched pairs of cadaveric femurs. Based on a primary bone sarcoma model, a joint-sparing, hemimetaphyseal wide resection was precisely outlined on each femur. For each pair, the resection was performed using the standard manual technique on one specimen and the custom jig-assisted technique on the other. Superimposition of preoperative and postresection images enabled quantitative analysis of resection accuracy. The mean maximum deviation from the preoperative plan was 9.0 mm for the manual group and 2.0 mm for the custom-jig group. The percentages of times the maximum deviation was greater than 3 mm and greater than 4 mm was 100% and 72% for the manual group and 5.6% and 0.0% for the custom-jig group, respectively. Our findings suggest that custom-jig technology substantially improves the accuracy of primary bone tumor resection, enabling a surgeon to reproduce a given preoperative plan reliably and consistently.
Keywords: bone neoplasms; bone tumor; comparative study; nuclear magnetic resonance imaging; methodology; magnetic resonance imaging; reproducibility; reproducibility of results; computer assisted tomography; tomography, x-ray computed; sarcoma; femur; osteotomy; surgery, computer-assisted; computer aided design; cadaver; computer assisted surgery; computer-aided design
Journal Title: Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research
Volume: 471
Issue: 6
ISSN: 0009-921X
Publisher: Springer  
Date Published: 2013-06-01
Start Page: 2007
End Page: 2016
Language: English
DOI: 10.1007/s11999-012-2769-6
PUBMED: 23292886
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC3706671
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 25 September 2013" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Patrick J Boland
    160 Boland
  2. John H Healey
    547 Healey