Publications by authors named "Frank J Schwab"

Patients with proximal junctional kyphosis (PJK) or failure (PJF) may demonstrate disparate outcomes and recovery when fused to the upper (UT) versus lower (LT) thoracic spine. Few studies have distinguished the reoperation and recovery abilities of patients with PJK or PJF when fused to the upper (UT) versus lower (LT) thoracic spine. Adult spine deformity patients ≥ 18 yrs with preoperative and 5-year (5Y) data fused to the sacrum/pelvis were included.

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Objective: Malalignment following cervical spine deformity (CSD) surgery can negatively impact outcomes and increase complications. Despite the growing ability to plan alignment, it remains unclear whether preoperative goals are achieved with surgery. The objective of this study was to assess how good surgeons are at achieving their preoperative goal alignment following CSD surgery.

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Study Design: Retrospective analysis of prospectively-collected data.

Objective: This study aims to define clinically relevant blood loss in adult spinal deformity (ASD) surgery.

Background: Current definitions of excessive blood loss following spine surgery are highly variable and may be suboptimal in predicting adverse events (AE).

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how different reasons for revision surgery in adult spinal deformity (ASD) patients affect their postoperative outcomes, revealing a high incidence of reoperations.
  • A sample of 891 ASD patients was analyzed retrospectively, categorizing their revisions by cause, and assessing complications, radiographic results, and disability metrics.
  • Findings suggest that different etiologies (mechanical, infection, wound, and SI pain) lead to varying outcomes, with mechanical issues showing less improvement over time compared to others.
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Background And Objectives: The spectrum of patients requiring adult spinal deformity (ASD) surgery is highly variable in baseline (BL) risk such as age, frailty, and deformity severity. Although improvements have been realized in ASD surgery over the past decade, it is unknown whether these carry over to high-risk patients. We aim to determine temporal differences in outcomes at 2 years after ASD surgery in patients stratified by BL risk.

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Objective: The goal of this study was to assess the impact of fractional curve (FC) severity on curve progression and postoperative outcomes in patients undergoing adult idiopathic scoliosis (AdIS) correction.

Methods: Patients with AdIS who had preoperative coronal plane deformity and who had undergone thoracolumbar fusion with a lowermost instrumented vertebra (LIV) between L1 and L4 were included. Patients were stratified by 6-week postoperative FC severity (small FC, ≤ 40th percentile, large FC, ≥ 60th percentile of the entire cohort; calculated as the Cobb angle between LIV and S1) and age groups.

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Purpose: To investigate the impact of the Global Alignment and Proportion (GAP) score components on patient outcomes in Adult Spine Deformity (ASD) surgery.

Methods: Patients included underwent assessment via the GAP score and its individual components: pelvic version (GAP PV), lumbar lordosis (GAP LL), lumbar distribution index (GAP LDI) and spinopelvic component (GAP SP). Multivariable analyses assessed the association between alignment in these components and clinical outcomes in ASD patients.

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Article Synopsis
  • Understanding preoperative deformity in lumbar spine revisions can help improve outcomes and prevent failures in future surgeries.
  • A study compared patients with no prior surgery (PRIMARY) and those with short (SHORT) or long (LONG) fusions, highlighting how different failure modes correlate with shorter fusions.
  • Results showed that revision patients experienced significant alignment issues and often required more invasive correction techniques, indicating a need for better alignment strategies in future operations.
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Article Synopsis
  • - The study is a secondary data analysis of an NIH-sponsored research focusing on cost-effectiveness between surgical and non-surgical treatments for Adult Symptomatic Lumbar Scoliosis (ASLS) eight years post-enrollment.
  • - Previous analyses at the five-year mark showed a cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) of $44,033 (As-Treated) and $27,480 (Intent-to-treat), while the current eight-year data suggests that surgical treatment is more economically favorable, with an ICER of $20,569 per Quality Adjusted Life Year (QALY) gained.
  • - The conclusion highlights that operative treatment for ASLS presents a more cost-effective option compared to non-operative treatment, as indicated
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Article Synopsis
  • This multicentric retrospective study aimed to establish normative values for proximal junctional angles (PJA) in adult spinal deformity (ASD) surgery patients, using data from healthy volunteers for comparison.
  • The study analyzed data from 721 healthy individuals and 824 ASD surgery patients, assessing the rates of abnormal PJA values and comparing them with the rates of proximal junctional kyphosis (PJK) using different definitions.
  • Findings revealed significant differences in PJK rates based on the criteria used, highlighting the need for more precise level-adjusted assessments of PJA values to better define abnormalities and challenge traditional definitions of PJK.
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Summary Of Background Data: Yilgor et al developed the lumbar Lordosis Distribution Index to individualize the pelvic mismatch to each patient's pelvic incidence. The cervical lordosis distribution in relation to its apex has not been characterized.

Objective: Tailor correction of cervical deformity by incorporating the cervical apex into a distribution index(CLDI) to maximize clinical outcomes while lowering rates of junctional failure.

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Study Design: Retrospective cohort study.

Purpose: The impact of neuromuscular disorders such as multiple sclerosis (MS) on outcomes following long segment fusion is underreported. This study evaluates the impact of MS on two-year (2Y) postoperative complications and revisions following ≥ 4-level fusion for adult spinal deformity (ASD).

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Background: Our understanding of the relationship between sagittal alignment and mechanical complications is evolving. In normal spines, the L1-pelvic angle (L1PA) accounts for the magnitude and distribution of lordosis and is strongly associated with pelvic incidence (PI), and the T4-pelvic angle (T4PA) is within 4° of the L1PA. We aimed to examine the clinical implications of realignment to a normal L1PA and T4-L1PA mismatch.

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Purpose: To evaluate the variability in intraoperative fluid management during adult spinal deformity (ASD) surgery, and analyze the association with complications, intensive care unit (ICU) requirement, and length of hospital stay (LOS).

Methods: Multicenter comparative cohort study. Patients ≥ 18 years old and with ASD were included.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examines six cases of perioperative spinal cord injury (SCI) that occurred during complex adult deformity surgeries, noting their causes, treatments, and outcomes.
  • Out of 272 patients from the Scoli-RISK-1 cohort study, 2.2% experienced SCI, with cases occurring both during and after surgery.
  • The findings highlight the importance of close postoperative monitoring and timely intervention to prevent lasting neurological damage.
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Study Design: Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data.

Objective: Evaluate the impact of prior cervical constructs on upper instrumented vertebrae (UIV) selection and postoperative outcomes among patients undergoing thoracolumbar deformity correction.

Background: Surgical planning for adult spinal deformity (ASD) patients involves consideration of spinal alignment and existing fusion constructs.

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Purpose: Adult spinal deformity (ASD) patients with sagittal plane deformity (N) or structural lumbar/thoraco-lumbar (TL) curves can be treated with fusions stopping at the TL junction or extending to the upper thoracic (UT) spine. This study evaluates the impact on cost/cumulative quality-adjusted life year (QALY) in patients treated with TL vs UT fusion.

Methods: ASD patients with > 4-level fusion and 2-year follow-up were included.

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Purpose: To assess impact of baseline disability on HRQL outcomes.

Methods: CD patients with baseline (BL) and 2 year (2Y) data included, and ranked into quartiles by baseline NDI, from lowest/best score (Q1) to highest/worst score (Q4). Means comparison tests analyzed differences between quartiles.

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Purpose: Previous work comparing ASD to a normative population demonstrated that a large proportion of lumbar lordosis is lost proximally (L1-L4). The current study expands on these findings by collectively investigating regional angles and spinal contours.

Methods: 119 asymptomatic volunteers with full-body free-standing radiographs were used to identify age-and-PI models of each Vertebra Pelvic Angle (VPA) from L5 to T10.

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Background: Hip osteoarthritis (OA) is common in patients with adult spinal deformity (ASD). Limited data exist on the prevalence of hip OA in patients with ASD, or on its impact on baseline and postoperative alignment and patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs). Therefore, this paper will assess the prevalence and impact of hip OA on alignment and PROMs.

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Study Design: This study was a retrospective multi-center comparative cohort study.

Materials And Methods: A retrospective institutional database of operative adult spinal deformity patients was utilized. All fusions > 5 vertebral levels and including the sacrum/pelvis were eligible for inclusion.

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Article Synopsis
  • Severe sagittal plane deformity, particularly with significant loss of L4-S1 lordosis, can be effectively improved through surgical techniques like ALIF, PSO, and TLIF, but there’s limited data on their comparative effectiveness.
  • A study included 96 patients with severe spinal deformity, undergoing ALIF, PSO, or TLIF, and assessed their demographics, surgical outcomes, and complications.
  • Results showed that ALIF had similar lordosis correction to PSO but with fewer intraoperative complications, making it a preferable option for surgery when applicable.
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Study Design: Retrospective review of a prospectively-collected multicenter database.

Objectives: The objective of this study was to determine optimal strategies in terms of focal angular correction and length of proximal extension during revision for PJF.

Methods: 134 patients requiring proximal extension for PJF were analyzed in this study.

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The objective of this study was to evaluate if imbalance influences complication rates, radiological outcomes, and patient-reported outcomes (PROMs) following adult spinal deformity (ASD) surgery. ASD patients with baseline and 2-year radiographic and PROMs were included. Patients were grouped according to whether they answered yes or no to a recent history of pre-operative loss of balance.

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Study Design: Retrospective cohort.

Objective: To evaluate factors associated with the long-term durability of cost-effectiveness (CE) in ASD patients.

Background: A substantial increase in costs associated with the surgical treatment for adult spinal deformity (ASD) has given precedence to scrutinize the value and utility it provides.

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