Central cone design demonstrates greater micromotion compared to keel design in cementless tibial baseplates: A biomechanical analysis

Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2024 May 7. doi: 10.1002/ksa.12224. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to compare micromotion of two new cementless tibial baseplates to a cementless design with well-published clinical success.

Methods: Three cementless tibial baseplate designs (fixed-bearing [FB] with keel and cruciform pegs, rotating-platform with porous central cone and pegs, FB with cruciform keel and scalloped pegs) were evaluated on sawbone models. Loading was applied to the baseplate at a rate of 1 Hz for 10,000 cycles, which represents 6-8 weeks of stair descent. This time frame also represents the approximate time length for the induction of biologic fixation of cementless implants. Compressive and shear micromotion at the sawbone-implant interface were measured.

Results: At the end of the loading protocol, the central cone rotating-platform design exhibited greater micromotion at the anterior (p < 0.001), posterior (p < 0.001) and medial locations (p = 0.049) compared to the other two implants. The central cone design also exhibited greater translational micromotion in the sagittal plane at the medial (p = 0.001) and lateral locations (p = 0.034) and in the coronal plane anteriorly (p = 0.007).

Conclusion: The cementless central cone rotating-platform baseplate demonstrated greater vertical and translational micromotion compared to the two FB baseplates with a keel underloading. This may indicate lower initial mechanical stability in implants without a keel, which possibly affects osseointegration. The implication of this is yet unknown and requires further long-term clinical follow-up to correlate these laboratory findings.

Level of evidence: V (biomechanical study).

Keywords: cementless; fixed‐bearing; keels; micromotion; rotating‐platform; total knee arthroplasty.