Abstract
PURPOSE: This study aimed to (1) analyze the Coronal Plane Alignment of the Knee (CPAK) classification in patients undergoing unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA), (2) assess whether UKA can restore pre-arthritic coronal alignment by utilizing the arithmetic hip-knee-ankle angle (aHKA), and (3) evaluate the relationship between patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) and postoperative alignment following UKA. METHODS: We retrospectively analyzed 152 consecutive patients who underwent fixed-bearing medial UKA. A radiological analysis was conducted using an EOS imaging system. Postoperative alignment was classified as neutral (varus ≤ 3°), mild varus (3° < varus ≤ 7°), or marked varus (varus > 7°) based on the mechanical hip-knee-ankle angle (mHKA). The aHKA was calculated and the CPAK classification was used to categorize knee phenotypes. The PROMs were obtained both before and after the surgery. RESULTS: A total of 152 knees from 113 patients were included with a mean two-year follow-up. The mean difference between the postoperative mHKA and the estimated aHKA was 0.80° (90% CI 0.35 to 1.24; P = 0.003). Postoperatively, 63 (41.45%) of the 152 knees were in neutral group, 54 (35.53%) mild varus, and 35 (23.03%) marked varus. The neutrally aligned cohort did not exhibit significantly higher scores in range of motion, VAS, HSS, WOMAC, or FJS-12 scores compared to the mild or marked varus cohort (P = 0.205, 0.118, 0.076, 0.140, and 0.788, respectively) during the short-term follow-up. CONCLUSION: Non-robotically assisted, fixed-bearing medial UKA can restore pre-arthritic coronal alignment and achieve satisfactory PROMs. Fixed-bearing medial UKA aims to restore the pre-arthritic alignment rather than achieving neutral mechanical alignment.