Stratifying outcome based on the Oswestry Disability Index for operative treatment of adult spinal deformity on patients 60 years of age or older: a multicenter, multi-continental study on Prospective Evaluation of Elderly Deformity Surgery (PEEDS).

dc.contributor.author

Nielsen, Christopher J

dc.contributor.author

Lewis, Stephen J

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Oitment, Colby

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Martin, Allan R

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Lenke, Lawrence G

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Qiu, Yong

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Cheung, Kenneth Mc

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de Kleuver, Marinus

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Polly, David W

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Shaffrey, Christopher I

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Smith, Justin S

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Spruit, Maarten

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Alanay, Ahmet

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Matsuyama, Yukihiro

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Jentzsch, Thorsten

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Rienmuller, Anna

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Shear-Yashuv, Hananel

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Pellisé, Ferran

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Kelly, Michael P

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Sembrano, Jonathan N

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Dahl, Benny T

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Berven, Sigurd H

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Forum Deformity, Ao Spine Knowledge

dc.date.accessioned

2023-06-16T16:11:09Z

dc.date.available

2023-06-16T16:11:09Z

dc.date.issued

2021-11

dc.date.updated

2023-06-16T16:11:09Z

dc.description.abstract

Background context

Patients with adult spinal deformity suffer from disease related disability as measured by the Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) for which surgery can result in significant improvements.

Purpose

The purpose of this study was to show the change in overall and individual components of the ODI in patients aged 60 years or older following multi-level spinal deformity surgery.

Study design

Prospective, multicenter, multi-continental, observational longitudinal cohort study PATIENT SAMPLE: Patients ≥60 years undergoing primary spinal fusion surgery of ≥5 levels for coronal, sagittal or combined deformity.

Outcome measures

Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) METHODS: : Patients completed the ODI pre-operatively for baseline, then at 10 weeks, 12 months and 24 months post-operatively. ODI scores were grouped into deciles, and change was calculated with numerical score and improvement or worsening was further categorized from baseline as substantial (≥20%), marginal (≥10-<20%) or no change (within 10%).

Results

Two-hundred nineteen patients met inclusion criteria for the study. The median number of spinal levels fused was 9 [Q1=5.0, Q3=12.0]. Two-year mean (95% CI) ODI improvement was 19.3% (16.7%; 21.9%; p<.001) for all age groups, with mean scores improved from a baseline of 46.3% (44.1%; 48.4%) to 41.1% (38.5%; 43.6%) at 10 weeks (p<.001), 28.1% (25.6%; 30.6%) at 12 months (p<.001), and 27.0% (24.4%; 29.5%) at 24 months (p<.001). At 2 years, 45.5% of patients showed 20% or greater improvement in ODI, 23.7% improved between 10% and 20%, 26.3% reported no change (defined as±10% from baseline), 4.5% of patients reported a worsening between 10% to 20%, and none reported worsening greater than 20%. 59.0% of patients were severely disabled (ODI >40%) pre-operatively, which decreased to 20.2% at 2 years. Significant improvement was observed across all 10 ODI items at 12 and 24 months. The largest improvements were seen in pain, walking, standing, sex life, social life and traveling.

Conclusions

In this prospective, multicenter, multi-continental study of patients 60 years or older undergoing multi-level spinal deformity surgery, almost 70% of patients reported significant improvements in ODI without taking into account surgical indications, techniques or complications. Clear data is presented demonstrating the particular change from baseline for each decile of pre-operative ODI score, for each sub-score, and for each age group.
dc.identifier

S1529-9430(21)00822-6

dc.identifier.issn

1529-9430

dc.identifier.issn

1878-1632

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/28065

dc.language

eng

dc.publisher

Elsevier BV

dc.relation.ispartof

The spine journal : official journal of the North American Spine Society

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10.1016/j.spinee.2021.07.007

dc.subject

Spine

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Humans

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Scoliosis

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Disability Evaluation

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Treatment Outcome

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Retrospective Studies

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Longitudinal Studies

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Quality of Life

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Adult

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Aged

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Child, Preschool

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Infant

dc.title

Stratifying outcome based on the Oswestry Disability Index for operative treatment of adult spinal deformity on patients 60 years of age or older: a multicenter, multi-continental study on Prospective Evaluation of Elderly Deformity Surgery (PEEDS).

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

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

pubs.begin-page

1775

pubs.end-page

1783

pubs.issue

11

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

21

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