نویسندگان | Vahid Arbabi,Hassan Rayegan,Willem Paul GIELIS,Seyed Yousef Ahmadi Brooghani,Claudia Linder,Tim F Cootes,Pim A de Jong,Harrie Weinans,Roel J H Custers |
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نشریه | Acta Orthopaedica |
شماره صفحات | 1-6 |
شماره مجلد | 91 |
نوع مقاله | Full Paper |
تاریخ انتشار | 2020 |
رتبه نشریه | ISI |
نوع نشریه | چاپی |
کشور محل چاپ | ایران |
نمایه نشریه | ISI،JCR،Scopus |
چکیده مقاله
Background and purpose — Being able to predict the hip–knee–ankle angle (HKAA) from standard knee radiographs allows studies on malalignment in cohorts lacking full-limb radiography. We aimed to develop an automated image analysis pipeline to measure the femoro-tibial angle (FTA) from standard knee radiographs and test various FTA definitions to predict the HKAA. Patients and methods — We included 110 pairs of standard knee and full-limb radiographs. Automatic search algorithms found anatomic landmarks on standard knee radiographs. Based on these landmarks, the FTA was automatically calculated according to 9 different definitions (6 described in the literature and 3 newly developed). Pearson and intra-class correlation coefficient [ICC]) were determined between the FTA and HKAA as measured on full-limb radiographs. Subsequently, the top 4 FTA definitions were used to predict the HKAA in a 5-fold cross-validation setting. Results — Across all pairs of images, the Pearson correlations between FTA and HKAA ranged between 0.83 and 0.90. The ICC values from 0.83 to 0.90. In the cross-validation experiments to predict the HKAA, these values decreased only minimally. The mean absolute error for the best method to predict the HKAA from standard knee radiographs was 1.8° (SD 1.3). Interpretation — We showed that the HKAA can be automatically predicted from standard knee radiographs with fair accuracy and high correlation compared with the true HKAA. Therefore, this method enables research of the relationship between malalignment and knee pathology in large (epidemiological) studies lacking full-limb radiography.
tags: full-limb radiograph, hip–knee–ankle angle