AI Article Synopsis

  • The study was a retrospective review focusing on the variability in preoperative sagittal parameters in patients with adult spinal deformity (ASD) based on different intervals between radiographs.
  • A total of 139 patients were analyzed, revealing that all parameters showed consistency when x-rays were taken less than 21 weeks apart, but significant changes were observed after 21 weeks, especially in patients with prior surgeries.
  • The research concluded that longer intervals between x-rays can lead to significant changes in pelvic tilt and hip extension, indicating the need for timely radiographic assessments in surgical planning for ASD.

Article Abstract

Study Design: Retrospective review.

Objective: To evaluate preoperative variability in radiographic sagittal parameters in adult spinal deformity (ASD).

Summary Of Background Data: In ASD surgical planning, deformity magnitude is determined from preoperative radiographs. There are no studies evaluating the clinical relevance and timing to repeat radiographs during interval clinic visits and timing to repeat radiograph for preoperative planning.

Methods: A total of 139 patients with ASD with minimum two preoperative full-body spine x-rays were included. Cervical, thoracic, lumbar, pelvic, and hip/knee sagittal alignment parameters were analyzed using dedicated spine measurement software. Patients were grouped by time intervals between x-rays: A: 8 weeks or lesser, B: 10 to 20 weeks, and C: 21 weeks or more. Changes in sagittal parameters were correlated to age and deformity magnitude (T1 pelvic angle or pelvic tilt [PT] >20°).

Results: The cohort had mean age 59 years, mean body mass index 27, 30% men, 95 patients with no prior spine surgery, and 44 patients at minimum 9 months since prior spine surgery. There were 25 patients in group A, 38 in B, and 71 in C. All radiographic measures showed good time-based consistency at intervals less than 21 weeks (groups A and B). Group C had significant increases in PT (1.5°) and hip extension (2.1°) (P < 0.05). These changes were greater in group C patients with previous surgery (PT 3.7°; P < 0.006, hip extension 3.2°; P < 0.025). Greater interval changes in parameters were also associated with higher magnitudes of deformity and younger patient ages.

Conclusion: All sagittal radiographic parameters were statistically consistent at intervals of less than 21 weeks. In patients with more than 21 weeks between interval x-rays, change in PT was greater than the standard error of measurement for patients with prior surgery or severe deformity. Consideration should be made to obtain new x-rays for patients with ASD when the interval between clinical visits exceeds 5 months.

Level Of Evidence: 4.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/BRS.0000000000001648DOI Listing

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