Abstract

The Global Alignment and Proportion (GAP) score was developed to serve as a tool to predict mechanical complication probability in patients undergoing surgery for adult spinal deformity (ASD), serving as an aid for setting surgical goals to decrease the prevalence of mechanical complications in ASD surgery. However, it was developed using ASD patients for whom open surgical techniques were used for correction. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to assess the applicability of the score for patients undergoing circumferential minimally invasive surgery (cMIS) for correction of ASD. Study participants were patients undergoing cMIS ASD surgery without the use of osteotomies with a minimum of four levels fused and 2 years of follow-up. Postoperative GAP scores were calculated for all patients, and the association with mechanical failure was analyzed. The authors identified 182 patients who underwent cMIS correction of ASD. Mechanical complications were found in 11.1% of patients with proportioned spinopelvic states, 20.5% of patients with moderately disproportioned spinopelvic states, and 18.8% of patients with severely disproportioned spinopelvic states. Analysis with a chi-square test showed a significant difference between the cMIS and original GAP study cohorts in the moderately disproportioned and severely disproportioned spinopelvic states, but not in the proportioned spinopelvic states. For patients stratified into proportioned, moderately disproportioned, and severely disproportioned spinopelvic states, the GAP score predicted 6%, 47%, and 95% mechanical complication rates, respectively. The mechanical complication rate in patients undergoing cMIS ASD correction did not correlate with the calculated GAP spinopelvic state.

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