Outcomes of Operative and Nonoperative Treatment for Adult Spinal Deformity: A Prospective, Multicenter, Propensity-Matched Cohort Assessment With Minimum 2-Year Follow-up.

dc.contributor.author

Smith, Justin S

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Lafage, Virginie

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Shaffrey, Christopher I

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Schwab, Frank

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Lafage, Renaud

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Hostin, Richard

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OʼBrien, Michael

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Boachie-Adjei, Oheneba

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Akbarnia, Behrooz A

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Mundis, Gregory M

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Errico, Thomas

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Kim, Han Jo

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Protopsaltis, Themistocles S

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Hamilton, D Kojo

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Scheer, Justin K

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Sciubba, Daniel

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Ailon, Tamir

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Fu, Kai-Ming G

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Kelly, Michael P

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Zebala, Lukas

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Line, Breton

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Klineberg, Eric

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Gupta, Munish

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Deviren, Vedat

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Hart, Robert

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Burton, Doug

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Bess, Shay

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Ames, Christopher P

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International Spine Study Group

dc.date.accessioned

2023-07-20T14:22:43Z

dc.date.available

2023-07-20T14:22:43Z

dc.date.issued

2016-06

dc.date.updated

2023-07-20T14:22:39Z

dc.description.abstract

Background

High-quality studies that compare operative and nonoperative treatment for adult spinal deformity (ASD) are needed.

Objective

To compare outcomes of operative and nonoperative treatment for ASD.

Methods

This is a multicenter, prospective analysis of consecutive ASD patients opting for operative or nonoperative care. Inclusion criteria were age >18 years and ASD. Operative and nonoperative patients were propensity matched with the baseline Oswestry Disability Index, Scoliosis Research Society-22r, thoracolumbar/lumbar Cobb angle, pelvic incidence-to-lumbar lordosis mismatch (PI-LL), and leg pain score. Analyses were confined to patients with a minimum of 2 years of follow-up.

Results

Two hundred eighty-six operative and 403 nonoperative patients met the criteria, with mean ages of 53 and 55 years, 2-year follow-up rates of 86% and 55%, and mean follow-up of 24.7 and 24.8 months, respectively. At baseline, operative patients had significantly worse health-related quality of life (HRQOL) based on all measures assessed (P < .001) and had worse deformity based on pelvic tilt, pelvic incidence-to-lumbar lordosis mismatch, and sagittal vertical axis (P ≤ .002). At the minimum 2-year follow-up, all HRQOL measures assessed significantly improved for operative patients (P < .001), but none improved significantly for nonoperative patients except for modest improvements in the Scoliosis Research Society-22r pain (P = .04) and satisfaction (P < .001) domains. On the basis of matched operative-nonoperative cohorts (97 in each group), operative patients had significantly better HRQOL at follow-up for all measures assessed (P < .001), except Short Form-36 mental component score (P = .06). At the minimum 2-year follow-up, 71.5% of operative patients had ≥1 complications.

Conclusion

Operative treatment for ASD can provide significant improvement of HRQOL at a minimum 2-year follow-up. In contrast, nonoperative treatment on average maintains presenting levels of pain and disability.

Abbreviations

ASD, adult spinal deformityHRQOL, health-related quality of lifeLL, lumbar lordosisMCID, minimal clinically important differenceNRS, numeric rating scaleODI, Oswestry Disability IndexPI, pelvic incidenceSF-36, Short Form-36SRS-22r, Scoliosis Research Society-22rSVA, sagittal vertical axis.
dc.identifier.issn

0148-396X

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1524-4040

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/28466

dc.language

eng

dc.publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

dc.relation.ispartof

Neurosurgery

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10.1227/neu.0000000000001116

dc.subject

International Spine Study Group

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Humans

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Spinal Diseases

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Treatment Outcome

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Orthopedic Procedures

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Follow-Up Studies

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Prospective Studies

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Quality of Life

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Adult

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Middle Aged

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Female

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Male

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Propensity Score

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Conservative Treatment

dc.title

Outcomes of Operative and Nonoperative Treatment for Adult Spinal Deformity: A Prospective, Multicenter, Propensity-Matched Cohort Assessment With Minimum 2-Year Follow-up.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Shaffrey, Christopher I|0000-0001-9760-8386

pubs.begin-page

851

pubs.end-page

861

pubs.issue

6

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

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School of Medicine

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Clinical Science Departments

pubs.organisational-group

Orthopaedic Surgery

pubs.organisational-group

Neurosurgery

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

78

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