Correct understanding of the geometry of the glenoid (the socket of the shoulder joint) is key to successful planning
of shoulder replacement surgery. This surgery typically involves placing an implant in the shoulder joint to restore
joint function. The most relevant geometry is the glenoid version, which is the angular orientation of the glenoid
surface relative to the long axis of the scapula in the axial plane. However, measuring the glenoid version is not
straightforward and there are multiple measurement methods in the literature and used in commercial planning
software.
In this paper we introduce SciKit-SurgeryGlenoid, an open source toolkit for the measurement of glenoid
version. SciKit-SurgeryGlenoid contains implementations of the 4 most frequently used glenoid version measurement
algorithms enabling easy and unbiased comparison of the different techniques. We present the results of
using the software on 10 sets of pre-operative CT scans taken from patients who have subsequently undergone
shoulder replacement surgery. We further compare these results with those obtained from a commercial implant
planning software.
SciKit-SurgeryGlenoid currently requires manual segmentation of the relevant anatomical features for each
method. Future work will look at automating the segmentation process to build an automatic and repeatable
pipeline from CT or radiograph to quantitative glenoid version measurement.