Feasibility of intrathecal therapeutic injections in spinal muscular atrophy patients via a percutaneous transsacral hiatus route: An initial neuroimaging morphometric study.

Muscle Nerve

Department of Radiology, Division of Neuroimaging and Neurointervention, and Stanford Initiative for Multimodality Neuro-Imaging in Translational Anatomy Research, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California.

Published: March 2023

Introduction/aims: Standard fluoroscopic lumbar puncture (LP) can be impossible in patients with severe spinal deformities from spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) who require intrathecal nusinersen therapy. There usually exists a straight trajectory in the lower sacral canal (SC) that could allow image-guided percutaneous transsacral hiatus puncture of the lumbosacral dural sac. In this study we determine whether sacra are comparatively straighter in SMA patients (SMAps) vs healthy controls (HCs), which may facilitate unhindered transsacral hiatus spinal needle insertion for intrathecal nusinersen therapy.

Methods: We retrospectively analyzed lumbosacral spine computed tomograms (CTs) or CT-myelogram images of 38 SMAps and age- and sex-matched HCs. We digitally measured ventrodorsal sacral curvatures, SC surface areas, dural sac termination levels, and distances from sacral hiatus to the most caudad aspects of dural sacs ("needle distance").

Results: Mean ages of HCs and SMAps were 32.7 and 31.7 years, respectively, with dural sacs terminating at similar levels. Mean values for morphometrics were: (a) midsagittal SC surface area for HCs = 701.2 mm , and for SMAps = 601.5 mm (not statistically significant [ns]); (b) using a "line method," sacral curvature for HCs = 61.9°, and SMAp = 35.7° (P = .0009), and was similar when using an "angle summation method"; (c) width of sacral hiatus for HCs = 14.9 mm, and SMAps = 15.0 mm (ns); and (d) "needle distance" for HCs = 54.7 mm, and SMAps = 49.9 mm (ns).

Discussion: SMAps have significantly straighter sacra compared with HCs, which theoretically renders them more amenable to percutaneous transsacral hiatus puncture of the dural sac.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mus.27782DOI Listing

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