Long-term Morbidity in Patients After Surgical Correction of Adult Spinal Deformity: Results From a Cohort With Minimum 5-year Follow-up.

Abstract

Study design

Retrospective.

Objective

The objective of this study is to describe the rate of postoperative morbidity before and after two-year (2Y) follow-up for patients undergoing surgical correction of adult spinal deformity (ASD).

Summary of background data

Advances in modern surgical techniques for deformity surgery have shown promising short-term clinical results. However, the permanence of radiographic correction, mechanical complications, and revision surgery in ASD surgery remains a clinical challenge. Little information exists on the incidence of long-term morbidity beyond the acute postoperative window.

Methods

ASD patients with complete baseline and five-year (5Y) health-related quality of life and radiographic data were included. The rates of adverse events, including proximal junctional kyphosis (PJK), proximal junctional failure (PJF), and reoperations up to 5Y were documented. Primary and revision surgeries were compared. We used logistic regression analysis to adjust for demographic and surgical confounders.

Results

Of 118 patients eligible for 5Y follow-up, 99(83.9%) had complete follow-up data. The majority were female (83%), mean age 54.1 years and 10.4 levels fused and 14 undergoing three-column osteotomy. Thirty-three patients had a prior fusion and 66 were primary cases. By 5Y postop, the cohort had an adverse event rate of 70.7% with 25 (25.3%) sustaining a major complication and 26 (26.3%) receiving reoperation. Thirty-eight (38.4%) developed PJK by 5Y and 3 (4.0%) developed PJF. The cohort had a significantly higher rate of complications (63.6% vs. 19.2%), PJK (34.3% vs. 4.0%), and reoperations (21.2% vs. 5.1%) before 2Y, all P <0.01. The most common complications beyond 2Y were mechanical complications.

Conclusions

Although the incidence of adverse events was high before 2Y, there was a substantial reduction in longer follow-up indicating complications after 2Y are less common. Complications beyond 2Y consisted mostly of mechanical issues.

Department

Description

Provenance

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1097/brs.0000000000004681

Publication Info

Imbo, Bailey, Tyler Williamson, Rachel Joujon-Roche, Oscar Krol, Peter Tretiakov, Salman Ahmad, Claudia Bennett-Caso, Andrew J Schoenfeld, et al. (2023). Long-term Morbidity in Patients After Surgical Correction of Adult Spinal Deformity: Results From a Cohort With Minimum 5-year Follow-up. Spine, 48(15). pp. 1089–1094. 10.1097/brs.0000000000004681 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/31769.

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Scholars@Duke

Passias

Peter Passias

Instructor in the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery

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