Brief Report
A comparison of five approaches to measurement of anatomic knee alignment from radiographs

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joca.2009.10.005Get rights and content
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Summary

Objective

The recent recognition of the correlation of the hip–knee–ankle angle (HKA) with femur–tibia angle (FTA) on a standard knee radiograph has led to the increasing inclusion of FTA assessments in OA studies due to its clinical relevance, cost effectiveness and minimal radiation exposure. Our goal was to investigate the performance metrics of currently used methods of FTA measurement to determine whether a specific protocol could be recommended based on these results.

Methods

Inter- and intra-rater reliability of FTA measurements were determined by intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) of two independent analysts. Minimal detectable differences were determined and the correlation of FTA and HKA was analyzed by linear regression. Differences among methods of measuring HKA were assessed by ANOVA.

Results

All five methods of FTA measurement demonstrated high precision by inter- and intra-rater reproducibility (ICCs  0.93). All five methods displayed good accuracy, but after correction for the offset of FTA from HKA, the femoral notch landmark method was the least accurate. However, the methods differed according to their minimal detectable differences; the FTA methods utilizing the center of the base of the tibial spines or the center of the tibial plateau as knee center landmarks yielded the smallest minimal detectable differences (1.25° and 1.72°, respectively).

Conclusion

All methods of FTA were highly reproducible, but varied in their accuracy and sensitivity to detect meaningful differences. Based on these parameters we recommend standardizing measurement angles with vertices at the base of the tibial spines or the center of the tibia and comparing single-point and two-point methods in larger studies.

Key words

Osteoarthritis
Radiography
Lower extremity alignment

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