BackgroundAcetabular component anteversion (ACA) markedly impacts the outcome of total hip arthroplasty (THA) and thus is routinely measured on radiographs postoperatively. However, clinical ACA measurement methods are either too complicated or subjective due to three drawbacks: complex calculations, measurement of obscured points, and complex geometric drawings. This study aimed to develop a precise and convenient novel method of measuring ACA on routine radiographs without the three drawbacks and to verify its accuracy and reliability by comparing it against existing methods.MethodsA novel geometric principle to measure ACA was developed. Accordingly, a protractor was designed to measure radiographic anteversion (RA) on anteroposterior (AP) hip radiographs. Three researchers measured RA twice, using the protractor, McLaren’s, and Pradhan’s method on 26 computer-simulated radiographs with pre-set RAs and 20 actual radiographs. Accuracy was assessed by errors on simulated radiographs, and reliability was assessed by results of measurements on simulated and actual radiographs.ResultsThe absolute error of the novel method (1.01° ± 1.06°) was lower than McLaren’s method (1.34° ± 1.16°) (p < 0.05) and not significantly different from Pradhan’s method (1.10° ± 1.02°) (p = 0.392). The protractor’s intra-rater and inter-rater reliability were good-to-excellent or excellent and higher or equivalent to the two other methods.ConclusionsThe novel method avoids the three major drawbacks of conventional methods. Its accuracy is significantly higher than McLaren’s method and comparable to Pradhan’s. The novel method has higher or non-inferior accuracy and reliability than McLaren’s and Pradhan’s methods.
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