Abstract

BackgroundThere is no consensus regarding the acceptable level of medical radiation exposure in patients with early-onset scoliosis. This study aimed to quantify radiation exposure in these patients and investigate factors associated with high exposure. MethodsPatients with early-onset scoliosis who received care for their spine deformity and other comorbidities in our institution were retrospectively reviewed. Cumulative radiation exposure and total number of imaging studies were recorded. Patients with ≥30 mSv exposure were classified as high exposure and analyzed to clarify factors associated with high exposure. ResultsThirty-five patients were included for analysis. The etiology of scoliosis was idiopathic in 8 patients, congenital in 7, syndromic in 8, and neuromuscular in 12. Fifteen patients underwent 19 spinal surgeries. The types of operation performed were definitive fusion (n = 12), vertebrectomy for hemivertebra (n = 2), growing rod (n = 1), lengthening (n = 3), and revision/partial implant removal (n = 1). The mean cumulative radiation dose was 22.3 mSv (range, 2.5–94.5 mSv). Spine radiography and computed tomography combined accounted for 15.0 mSv (range, 2.4–52.5 mSv, 67.3% of the mean cumulative dose). The mean radiation dose was significantly higher in patients who underwent spinal surgery than in those who did not (31.2 mSv vs. 15.6 mSv). The high-exposure group comprised 10 patients (1 idiopathic, 1 congenital, 5 syndromic, and 3 neuromuscular scoliosis) and 8 underwent 11 spinal operations. Among 8 patients who underwent spinal surgery, the cumulative radiation dose for spine was ≥30 mSv and spine computed tomography was performed an average of 4.0 times. ConclusionsNearly one-third of patients with early-onset scoliosis and half of patients who underwent spinal surgery had >30 mSv radiation exposure due to multiple computed tomography. Medical radiation exposure and associated cancer risk should be considered when treating these patients.

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