AI Article Synopsis

  • The study is a retrospective cohort analysis aimed at assessing how the level of caudal instrumentation affects revision rates after posterior cervical laminectomy and fusion.
  • It involved analyzing a database of 204 patients over a minimum follow-up of one year, dividing them into two groups based on where their fusion ended—cervical (C7) or thoracic (T1/T2).
  • Findings indicated that the overall revision rate was similar between both groups (7.3% for cervical and 10.4% for thoracic), and no independent risk factors for revision surgery were identified, suggesting that fusion constructs can safely end at the cervical spine without increasing revision risk.

Article Abstract

Study Design: Retrospective cohort study.

Objectives: To evaluate the effect of caudal instrumentation level on revision rates following posterior cervical laminectomy and fusion.

Methods: A retrospective review of a prospectively collected database was performed. Minimum follow-up was one year. Patients were divided into two groups based on the caudal level of their index fusion construct (Group 1-cervical and Group 2- thoracic). Reoperation rates were compared between the two groups, and preoperative demographics and radiographic parameters were compared between patients who required revision and those who did not. Multivariate binomial regression analysis was performed to determine independent risk factors for revision surgery.

Results: One hundred thirty-seven (137/204) patients received fusion constructs that terminated at C7 (Group 1), while 67 (67/204) received fusion constructs that terminated at T1 or T2 (Group 2). The revision rate was 8.33% in the combined cohort, 7.3% in Group 1, and 10.4% in Group 2. There was no significant difference in revision rates between the 2 groups ( = .43). Multivariate regression analysis did not identify any independent risk factors for revision surgery.

Conclusion: This study shows no evidence of increased risk of revision in patients with fusion constructs terminating in the cervical spine when compared to patients with constructs crossing the cervicothoracic junction. These findings support terminating the fusion construct proximal to the cervicothoracic junction when indicated.

Level Of Evidence: III.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10538346PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/21925682221083926DOI Listing

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