Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Anterior lumbar interbody fusion (ALIF) is a versatile and powerful technique for a variety of lumbar degenerative pathologies. Adding posterior supplementary fixation to ALIF (ALIF+PSF) is common and may confer benefits in terms of higher fusion rate but could contribute to adjacent segment disease (ASD) due to additional rigidity. METHODS: Adult patients who underwent primary ALIF for lumbar degenerative pathology between levels L4-S1 over a 12-year period were included. Cases of trauma, cancer, infection, supplemental decompression, noncontiguous fusions, prior lumbar fusions, and other interbody devices were excluded. Primary outcomes included reoperation for nonunion and ASD. Multivariable Cox proportional hazard regression was used to evaluate risks adjusting for patient characteristics. RESULTS: The study consisted of 1377 cases; 307 ALIF alone and 1070 ALIF+PSF. Mean follow-up time was 5.6-years. 5-year crude nonunion incidence was 2.4% for ALIF only and 0.5% for ALIF+PSF; after adjustment for covariates, a lower operative nonunion risk was observed for ALIF+PSF (HR = 0.22, 95% CI = 0.07-0.70). Of patients deemed potentially suitable for ALIF alone, one would need to add PSF in 53-patients to prevent one case of operative nonunion at a 5-year follow-up (number needed to treat). Five-year operative ASD incidence was 4.3% for ALIF only and 6.2% for ALIF+PSF; with adjustments, no difference was observed between the cohorts (HR = 0.96, 95% CI = 0.53-1.74). CONCLUSIONS: While addition of posterior instrumentation in ALIFs is associated with lower risk of operative nonunion compared to ALIF alone, it is rare in both techniques (<5%). Accordingly, surgeons should evaluate added risks associated with addition of PSF, and rather reserve PSF for patients at higher risk for operative nonunion. Rates of operative ASD were not statistically higher with addition of PSF suggesting concern regarding future ASD may be less supported.

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