BACKGROUND CONTEXT Substantial adult spinal deformity (ASD) research has focused on sagittal plane radiological assessment and emphasized the importance of sagittal correction on patient-reported outcomes. It seems less attention has been given to evaluation of ASD in the coronal plane. However, recent ASD studies have demonstrated baseline global coronal malalignment (GCM; substantial displacement of the C7 coronal plumb line from midsacrum) in up to 35% of patients. Moreover, GCM can worsen postoperatively or may occur as an iatrogenic complication in previously balanced patients. Collectively, this may suggest that the associated clinical impact of GCM on ASD surgical outcomes has been underestimated. Currently, few reports focus on surgical outcomes in ASD patients with GCM. PURPOSE Our objective was to assess treatment outcomes and complication rates associated with ASD surgery in the subset of patients with severe GCM. STUDY DESIGN/SETTING Retrospective review of a prospectively collected multicenter consecutive case registry. PATIENT SAMPLE Enrollment required: age ≥18 years, scoliosis ≥20°, sagittal vertical axis (SVA) ≥5cm, pelvic tilt ≥25°, and/or thoracic kyphosis ≥60°. OUTCOME MEASURES Radiographic correction (both standard coronal and sagittal spinopelvic deformity measurements) and health-related quality of life (HRQL) outcomes, which included Oswestry Disability Index (ODI), Short Form-36 (SF-36) scores, Scoliosis Research Society-22 (SRS-22) scores, and back/leg pain numerical rating scale (NRS) scores. METHODS Surgically treated ASD patients with severe GCM (coronal C7PL-midsacral offset magnitude ≥1 SD above the mean) were identified. Baseline and follow-up radiographic and HRQL outcomes were analyzed. Percentages of patients achieving minimal clinically important difference (MCID) and substantial clinical benefit (SCB) were assessed. Demographic, frailty, surgical, and complications data were collected. The primary focus for analysis was on patients who reached minimum 2-year follow-up. RESULTS Of 691 potentially eligible operative patients (mean GCM = 4±3 cm), 80 met criteria for severe GCM ≥ 7cm. Of these 80 patients, 62 (78%, mean age 64 years, 81% women) had minimum 2-year follow-up. Baseline frailty score was 3.9±1.5 (indicating patients were frail) and 48% had prior spine fusion. Surgical data included: posterior-only (58%), mean fusion 13 levels, sacroiliac fixation (97%), and three-column osteotomy (36%). Postoperative biplane alignment improved significantly (p CONCLUSIONS ASD surgery for patients with severe GCM is associated with significant improvements in biplane alignment and HRQL outcome measures despite high complication rates. FDA DEVICE/DRUG STATUS This abstract does not discuss or include any applicable devices or drugs.
Read full abstract