Body mass index affects outcomes after vertebral body tethering surgery

8Citations
Citations of this article
20Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Purpose: To compare the outcomes of anterior Vertebral Body Tethering (AVBT) surgery between overweight and non-overweight patients. Methods: AIS/JIS patients with AVBT with 2-year follow-up from a multi-center pediatric spine database were evaluated pre-operatively, 1st post-operative erect, and 2 years post-operatively. ANOVA was used to compare 3 categories of BMI with significance as per Tukey–Kramer HSD post hoc test. Risk of scoliosis progression was analysed with Mid-P exact test. Results: 121 patients (51 underweight, 58 normal, 12 overweight; mean age 12.5 ± 1.6 yr; BMI 18.8 ± 4.6 kg/m2) were identified. Comparing underweight, normal, and overweight groups: mean pre-operative age (13 yr, 13 yr, 12 yr), scoliosis (52°, 50°, 52°), pre-operative kyphosis (29°, 28°, 33°), peri-operative scoliosis correction (44%, 42%, 46%), and complications by 2-year follow-up (23%, 24%, 17%) were similar between groups. There was one broken tether in each of the underweight and normal weight groups. Change in percent scoliosis correction from 1st erect to 2-year post-operative (i.e., growth modulation phase) was not significantly different between groups; however, the risk ratio for scoliosis progression during this period was 4.74 (1.02–22.02; p = 0.04) for overweight patients. Conclusion: Our findings demonstrate that, as compared to normal weight and underweight patients, overweight patients did not have a statistically significant difference in intra-operative scoliosis correction or in risk of experiencing complication; however, overweight patients had a risk ratio of 4.74 for progression of scoliosis during the growth modulation phase of treatment from first erect radiographs to minimum 2-year follow-up. Level of evidence: III.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Mishreky, A., Parent, S., Miyanji, F., Smit, K., Murphy, J., Bowker, R., … Zhang, T. J. (2022). Body mass index affects outcomes after vertebral body tethering surgery. Spine Deformity, 10(3), 563–571. https://doi.org/10.1007/s43390-021-00455-8

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free