Operative Treatment of Severe Scoliosis in Symptomatic Adults: Multicenter Assessment of Outcomes and Complications With Minimum 2-Year Follow-up. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • BACKGROUND: Few reports focus on adults with severe scoliosis. OBJECTIVE: To report surgical outcomes and complications for adults with severe scoliosis. METHODS: A multicenter, retrospective review was performed on operatively treated adults with severe scoliosis (minimum coronal Cobb: thoracic [TH] ≥ 75°, thoracolumbar [TL] ≥ 50°, lumbar [L] ≥ 50°). RESULTS: Of 178 consecutive patients, 146 (82%; TH = 8, TL = 88, L = 50) achieved minimum 2-yr follow-up (mean age = 53.9 ± 13.2 yr, 92% women). Operative details included posterior-only (58%), 3-column osteotomy (14%), iliac fixation (72%), and mean posterior fusion = 13.2 ± 3.7 levels. Global coronal alignment (3.8 to 2.8 cm, P = .001) and maximum coronal Cobb improved significantly (P ≤.020): TH (84º to 57º; correction = 32%), TL (67º to 35º; correction = 48%), L (61º to 29º; correction = 53%). Sagittal alignment improved significantly (P < .001), most notably for L: C7-sagittal vertical axis 6.7 to 2.5 cm, pelvic incidence-lumbar lordosis mismatch 18º to 3º. Health-related quality-of-life (HRQL) improved significantly (P < .001), most notably for L: Oswestry Disability Index (44.4 ± 20.5 to 26.1 ± 18.3), Short Form-36 Physical Component Summary (30.2 ± 10.8 to 39.9 ± 9.8), and Scoliosis Research Society-22r Total (2.9 ± 0.7 to 3.8 ± 0.7). Minimal clinically important difference and substantial clinical benefit thresholds were achieved in 36% to 75% and 29% to 51%, respectively. Ninety-four (64%) patients had ≥1 complication (total = 191, 92 minor/99 major, most common = rod fracture [13.0%]). Fifty-seven reoperations were performed in 37 (25.3%) patients, with most common indications deep wound infection (11) and rod fracture (10). CONCLUSION: Although results demonstrated high rates of complications, operative treatment of adults with severe scoliosis was associated with significant improvements in mean HRQL outcome measures for the study cohort at minimum 2-yr follow-up.

authors

  • Buell, Thomas J
  • Smith, Justin S
  • Shaffrey, Christopher I
  • Kim, Han Jo
  • Klineberg, Eric O
  • Lafage, Virginie
  • Lafage, Renaud
  • Protopsaltis, Themistocles S
  • Passias, Peter G
  • Mundis, Gregory M
  • Eastlack, Robert K
  • Deviren, Vedat
  • Kelly, Michael P
  • Daniels, Alan H
  • Gum, Jeff L
  • Soroceanu, Alex
  • Hamilton, D Kojo
  • Gupta, Munish C
  • Burton, Douglas C
  • Hostin, Richard A
  • Kebaish, Khaled M
  • Hart, Robert A
  • Schwab, Frank J
  • Bess, Shay
  • Ames, Christopher P

publication date

  • November 18, 2021

Research

keywords

  • Scoliosis
  • Spinal Fusion

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85121990892

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1093/neuros/nyab352

PubMed ID

  • 34662889

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 89

issue

  • 6