1. How Good Are Surgeons at Achieving Their Preoperative Goal Sagittal Alignment Following Adult Deformity Surgery?
- Author
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Smith, Justin, Elias, Elias, Sursal, Tolga, Line, Breton, Lafage, Virginie, Lafage, Renaud, Klineberg, Eric, Kim, Han, Passias, Peter, Nasser, Zeina, Gum, Jeffrey, Eastlack, Robert, Daniels, Alan, Mundis, Gregory, Hostin, Richard, Protopsaltis, Themistocles, Soroceanu, Alex, Hamilton, David, Kelly, Michael, Lewis, Stephen, Gupta, Munish, Schwab, Frank, Burton, Douglas, Ames, Christopher, Lenke, Lawrence, Shaffrey, Christopher, and Bess, Shay
- Subjects
adult spinal deformity ,alignment prediction ,kyphosis ,sagittal alignment ,scoliosis ,surgery - Abstract
STUDY DESIGN: Multicenter, prospective cohort. OBJECTIVES: Malalignment following adult spine deformity (ASD) surgery can impact outcomes and increase mechanical complications. We assess whether preoperative goals for sagittal alignment following ASD surgery are achieved. METHODS: ASD patients were prospectively enrolled based on 3 criteria: deformity severity (PI-LL ≥25°, TPA ≥30°, SVA ≥15 cm, TCobb≥70° or TLCobb≥50°), procedure complexity (≥12 levels fused, 3-CO or ACR) and/or age (>65 and ≥7 levels fused). The surgeon documented sagittal alignment goals prior to surgery. Goals were compared with achieved alignment on first follow-up standing radiographs. RESULTS: The 266 enrolled patients had a mean age of 61.0 years (SD = 14.6) and 68% were women. Mean instrumented levels was 13.6 (SD = 3.8), and 23.2% had a 3-CO. Mean (SD) offsets (achieved-goal) were: SVA = -8.5 mm (45.6 mm), PI-LL = -4.6° (14.6°), TK = 7.2° (14.7°), reflecting tendencies to undercorrect SVA and PI-LL and increase TK. Goals were achieved for SVA, PI-LL, and TK in 74.4%, 71.4%, and 68.8% of patients, respectively, and was achieved for all 3 parameters in 37.2% of patients. Three factors were independently associated with achievement of all 3 alignment goals: use of PACs/equivalent for surgical planning (P < .001), lower baseline GCA (P = .009), and surgery not including a 3-CO (P = .037). CONCLUSIONS: Surgeons failed to achieve goal alignment of each sagittal parameter in ∼25-30% of ASD patients. Goal alignment for all 3 parameters was only achieved in 37.2% of patients. Those at greatest risk were patients with more severe deformity. Advancements are needed to enable more consistent translation of preoperative alignment goals to the operating room.
- Published
- 2024