Effect of the location of endplate cement extravasation on adjacent level fracture in osteoporotic patients undergoing vertebroplasty and kyphoplasty

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Abstract

Background: The most widely researched risk/complication following vertebroplasty (VP) orkyphoplasty (KP) is that of adjacent level fracture (ALF). Current literature results regarding theeffect of intradiscal extravasation of cement on the risk of ALF is conflicting with about halfof the studies concluding there is no added risk with endplate extravasation and half of thestudies reporting opposite conclusions.Objective: The purpose of the study is to further stratify the data to determine whetherspecifically the location and extent of endplate cement extravasation more strongly affect ALFrisk in osteoporotic patients following either VP or balloon KP.Study Design: Retrospective cohort study.Setting: University teaching hospitalMethods: One hundred and fifty-six cemented levels in 80 patients, treated at a singlecenter between 2008 and 2012 were reviewed. Age, gender, T-score, body mass index, andosteoporosis type (primary or secondary) were recorded. An ALF was defined as a fracture:1) in a non-cemented vertebra; 2) adjacent to a cemented level; and 3) not due to trauma ormalignancy. Location of the cement extravasation (anterior, middle, or posterior third of thevertebral body) and extravasation extent (percentage of the intervertebral disc height occupiedby the bolus) were measured. A logistic modeling strategy permitted examining the associationbetween the location and extent of extravasation and the odds of ALF.Results: ALF occurred in 14 of the 52 patients (27%) and 20 of the 98 levels (20.4%)remaining after exclusions. Odds of ALF were 5.9 times higher (95% CI: 1.6 to 21.2, P = 0.008)with extravasation when compared to no leakage. Odds of ALF in a given patient were 22.6times higher (95% CI: 3.0 to 170.9, P = 0.003) with anterior extravasation when comparedto no leakage. Leakage in the middle or posterior thirds and extent of extravasation were notassociated with ALF.Limitations: Limitations of the study include the retrospective study design and small samplesize as well as the retrospective implementation of follow-up criteria posing risk of selectionbias.Conclusions: Cement endplate extravasation isolated to the anterior third of the vertebralbody is associated with is significantly higher odds of ALF after VP or KP in patients withosteoporosis.

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Jesse, M. K., Petersen, B., Glueck, D., & Kriedler, S. (2015). Effect of the location of endplate cement extravasation on adjacent level fracture in osteoporotic patients undergoing vertebroplasty and kyphoplasty. Pain Physician, 18(5), E805–E814. https://doi.org/10.36076/ppj.2015/18/e805

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