Despite a Multifactorial Etiology, Rates of Distal Junctional Kyphosis After Adult Cervical Deformity Corrective Surgery Can be Dramatically Diminished by Optimizing Age Specific Radiographic Improvement.

Abstract

Study design

Retrospective cohort study of a prospectively collected single-center database.

Objective

Distal Junctional Kyphosis (DJK) is one of the most common complications in adult cervical deformity (ACD) correction. The utility of radiographic alignment alone in predicting and minimizing DJK occurrence warrants further study. To investigate the impact of post-operative radiographic alignment on development of DJK in ACD patients.

Methods

ACD patients (≥18 yrs) with complete baseline (BL) and two-year (2Y) radiographic data were included. DJF was defined as DJK greater than 15° (Passias et al) or DJK with reop. Multivariable logistic regression (MVA) identified 3-month predictors of DJK. Conditional inference tree (CIT) machine learning analysis determined threshold cutoffs. Radiographic predictors were combined in a model to determine predictive value using area under the curve (AUC) methodology. "Match" refers to ideal age-adjusted alignment.

Results

140 cervical deformity patients met inclusion criteria (61.3 yrs, 67% F, BMI: 29 kg/m2, CCI: 0.96 ± 1.3). Surgically, 51.3% had osteotomies, 47.1% had a posterior approach, 34.5% combined approach, 18.5% anterior approach, with an average 7.6 ± 3.8 levels fused and EBL of 824 mL. Overall, 33 patients (23.6%) developed DJK, and 11 patients (9%) developed DJF. MVA controlling for age, and baseline deformity, followed by CIT found 3M cSVA <3.7 cm (OR: .2, 95% CI:.06-.6), and TK T4-T12 <50 (OR:.17, 95% CI:.05-.5, both P < .05) were significant predictors of a lower likelihood of DJK. Receiver operator curve AUC using age, T1S match, TS-CL match, LL-TK match, cSVA <3.7 cm, and T4-T12 <50 predicted DJK with an AUC of .91 for DJK by 2Y, and .88 for DJF by 2Y.

Conclusion

These findings suggest post-operative radiographic alignment is strongly associated with distal junctional kyphosis. When utilizing age-adjusted realignment in addition to newly developed thresholds, a suggested post-operative cSVA target of 3.7 cm and thoracic kyphosis less than 50, it is possible to substantially reduce the occurrence of distal junctional kyphosis and distal junctional failure.

Department

Description

Provenance

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1177/21925682241303103

Publication Info

Mir, Jamshaid M, Oluwatobi O Onafowokan, Pawel P Jankowski, Oscar Krol, Tyler Williamson, Ankita Das, Zach Thomas, Benjamin Padon, et al. (2024). Despite a Multifactorial Etiology, Rates of Distal Junctional Kyphosis After Adult Cervical Deformity Corrective Surgery Can be Dramatically Diminished by Optimizing Age Specific Radiographic Improvement. Global spine journal. p. 21925682241303103. 10.1177/21925682241303103 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/31722.

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Scholars@Duke

Passias

Peter Passias

Instructor in the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery

Throughout my medical career, I have remained dedicated to improving my patients' quality of life. As a specialist in adult cervical and spinal deformity surgery, I understand the significant impact our interventions have on individuals suffering from debilitating pain and physical and mental health challenges. Spinal deformity surgery merges the complexities of spinal biomechanics with the needs of an aging population. My research focuses on spinal alignment, biomechanics, innovative surgical techniques, and health economics to ensure value-based care that enhances patient outcomes.


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