Abstract

Objective Adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) affects 1%-4% of adolescents in the early stages of puberty, but there is still no effective prediction method. This study aimed to establish a prediction model and validated the accuracy and efficacy of this model in predicting the occurrence of AIS. Methods Data was collected from a population-based school scoliosis screening program for AIS in China. A sample of 884 children and adolescents with the radiological lateral Cobb angle ≥ 10° was classified as an AIS case, and 895 non-AIS subjects with a Cobb angle < 10° were randomly selected from the screening system. All selected subjects were screened by visual inspection of clinical signs, the Adam's forward-bending test (FBT), and the measurement of angle of trunk rotation (ATR). LR and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were used to preliminarily screen the influential factors, and LR models with different adjusted weights were established to predict the occurrence of AIS. Results Multivariate LR and ROC curves indicated that angle of thoracic rotation (adjusted odds ratios (AOR) = 5.18 − 10.06), angle of thoracolumbar rotation (AOR = 4.67 − 7.22), angle of lumbar rotation (AOR = 6.97 − 8.09), scapular tilt (area under the curve (AUC) = 0.77, 95% CI: 0.75-0.80), shoulder-height difference, lumbar concave, and pelvic tilt were the risk predictors for AIS. LR models with different adjusted weights (by AOR, AUC, and AOR+AUC) performed similarly in predicting the occurrence of AIS compared with multivariate LR. The sensitivity (82.55%-83.27%), specificity (82.59%-83.33%), Youden's index (0.65-0.67), positive predictive value (82.85%-83.58%), negative predictive value (82.29%-83.03%), and total accuracy (82.57%-83.30%) manifested that LR could accurately identify patients with AIS. Conclusions LR model is a relatively high accurate and feasible method for predicting AIS. Increased performance of LR models using clinically relevant variables offers the potential to early identify high-risk groups of AIS.

Highlights

  • Adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) is defined as a threedimensional (3D) structural deformity of the spine and is diagnosed on the basis of having a radiological lateral Cobb angle ≥ 10° [1], which occurs mainly in children and adolescents

  • Multivariate Logistic regression (LR) and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves indicated that angle of thoracic rotation, angle of thoracolumbar rotation (AOR = 4:67 − 7:22), angle of lumbar rotation (AOR = 6:97 − 8:09), scapular tilt, shoulder-height difference, lumbar concave, and pelvic tilt were the risk predictors for AIS

  • The mean age of the AIS group was higher than non-AIS group (13:14 ± 1:87 vs. 12:67 ± 1:96, t = −4:63, P < 0:001), and more than half of the AIS patients came from high school (P < 0:001)

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Summary

Introduction

Adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) is defined as a threedimensional (3D) structural deformity of the spine and is diagnosed on the basis of having a radiological lateral Cobb angle ≥ 10° [1], which occurs mainly in children and adolescents. Brace and surgery have been proven to be an effective intervention for AIS, it is believed that early detection of potential clinical signs related to scoliosis enables effective intervention on relatively small curves [3, 4]. Previous studies reported that in identifying Cobb angle more than 20° the PPV varied from 17.4%-43.6%, and for requiring treatment it varied from 5.0%-9.4% [8, 9]. To improve the PPV of scoliosis screening, it is necessary to screen predicting indicators and establish the precise prediction model to accurately identify AIS patients

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