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Research

THE LOCATION OF TIBIAL OSTEOPHYTES IS PATIENT-SPECIFIC IN SEVERE OSTEOARTHRITIS

The European Orthopaedic Research Society (EORS) 2018 Meeting, PART 1, Galway, Ireland, September 2018.



Abstract

While osteophytes are a hallmark feature of knee osteoarthritis (OA), there is limited information regarding their location. In particular, it is unknown whether osteophytes develop in patient-specific locations or if there are consistent osteophyte locations among OA knees. This lack of data mainly stems from the fact that osteophytes have been mostly assessed with scores quantifying their size or severity but not their location. Given the important role that bone could play in OA development and the option it offers for OA treatment, there is a need to better understand the osteophyte locations. This study aimed to develop a method to compare osteophyte locations among knees and determine the overlapping ratio. CT arthrogram of 11 medial-compartment OA tibias (Kellgren-Lawrence grade ≥ 3) were segmented to locate the osteophytes and a bone matching technique was used to report the osteophyte locations of the 11 knees on a single reference tibia. This newly proposed method was highly reproducible (intra-operator ICC = 0.89). When used to compare the 11 tibias, it showed that more than 60% of the overall subosteophytal area, defined as the reference bone area covered by at least one osteophyte from one knee, was common to less than two tibias. Moreover, less than 20% of the overall subosteophytal area was common to five or more tibias. The results of this study suggest that osteophyte locations are specific to each knee. Future work should determine the relationships with mechanical loading, as this could explain the high inter-patient variability.


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