1. Tethered spinal cord among individuals with myelomeningocele: an analysis of the National Spina Bifida Patient Registry
- Author
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Mark S. Dias, Ming Wang, Elias B. Rizk, Robin Bowman, Michael D. Partington, Jeffrey P. Blount, Brandon G. Rocque, Betsy Hopson, Daria Ettinger, Amy Lee, and William O. Walker
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Clinical Article ,Neural tube defect ,Proportional hazards model ,business.industry ,Spina bifida ,T-cell receptor ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Tethered spinal cord syndrome ,Spinal cord ,Hydrocephalus ,Lesion ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVE The aims of this study were to review the National Spina Bifida Patient Registry (NSBPR) data set to study the rates of tethered spinal cord release (TCR) among patients with myelomeningocele and variability between centers, to compare TCR rates between males and females, and to study the relationships between TCR rates and other condition-specific characteristics. METHODS The NSBPR registry was queried to identify all patients with myelomeningocele. TCR rates were calculated over time using survival analyses; rates between centers and between males and females were compared. Cox proportional hazards models were constructed to identify relationships between TCR rates and sex, functional lesion level, ambulation status, treated hydrocephalus, and prior Chiari decompression. RESULTS Of 6339 patients with information about their operations, 1366 (21.5%) underwent TCR, with significant variability between centers. The majority (75.8%) underwent a single TCR. The annual TCR rate was linear between birth and 13 years (1.8%/year) but declined sharply from 14 to 21 years (0.7%/year). There was no period of time at which the TCR rate accelerated. There were no significant differences in TCR rates between males and females. TCR rate was not related to functional lesion level but was lower among nonambulators compared with community ambulators (p = 0.005) and among those with treated hydrocephalus (HR 0.30, p < 0.001), and higher among those having prior Chiari decompression (HR 1.71, p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS These results extend the results of prior single-institution studies, demonstrate significant treatment variability between institutions, and challenge the traditional concept that tethering is related to spinal cord stretching due to spinal growth.
- Published
- 2021
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