Abstract

Study Design:Retrospective study.Objectives:To elucidate risk factors for early-onset (2 months after initial kyphoplasty) adjacent vertebral fracture (EO-AVF) after kyphoplasty.Methods:A total of 108 vertebral bodies (95 patients) were included in this study. We examined patient backgrounds, the spinal level of EO-AVFs, surgery-related factors, and imaging findings. We divided the cases into 2 groups: patients with EO-AVF and patients without EO-AVF. Univariate, correlation, and multivariate analyses were conducted to reveal the risks factors for EO-AVFs for these 2 groups.Results:EO-AVFs developed in 28 vertebral bodies; they did not develop in 80 vertebral bodies. The overall EO-AVF incidence rate was 26%. The spinal level was the thoracolumbar junction for 93% of patients and another level for 7%, thus demonstrating the concentration of EO-AVFs in the thoracolumbar junction. For patients without EO-AVF and those with EO-AVF, there were significant differences in age (76 and 80 years, respectively), preoperative vertebral angles (VAs) (17.8° and 23°, respectively), and corrected VAs (7.3° and 12.7°, respectively). Significant differences were not observed for other factors. Pearson’s correlation coefficient was 0.661 (P < .000), thereby showing a significantly positive correlation between preoperative VAs and corrected VAs. Logistic regression analysis indicated that age (odds ratio, 1.112; 95% CI, 1.025-1.206) and preoperative VAs (odds ratio, 1.08; 95% CI, 1.026-1.135) were covariates and that the presence of an EO-AVF was a dependent variable. Therefore, both were predictable risk factors for EO-AVFs.Conclusion:Age, preoperative VAs, and corrected VAs are risk factors for EO-AVFs after kyphoplasty.

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