D. Kojo Hamilton, Adam S. Kanter, Bryan D. Bolinger, Gregory M. Mundis Jr., Stacie Nguyen, Praveen V. Mummaneni, Neel Anand, Richard G. Fessler, Peter G. Passias, Paul Park, Frank La Marca, Juan S. Uribe, Michael Y. Wang, Behrooz A. Akbarnia, Christopher I. Shaffrey, David O. Okonkwo


July 2016, Volume 25, Issue 8, pp 2605 - 2611 Original Article Read Full Article 10.1007/s00586-016-4443-2

First Online: 24 February 2016

Introduction

Minimally invasive surgical (MIS) techniques are gaining popularity in the treatment of adult spinal deformity (ASD). The premise is that MIS techniques will lead to equivalent outcomes and a reduction in perioperative complications when compared with open techniques. Potential issues with MIS techniques are a limited capacity to correct lumbar lordosis, unknown long-term efficacy, and the potential need for revision surgery. This study compares reoperation rates and reasons for reoperation following MIS, hybrid, and open surgery for ASD through multicenter database analysis.

Methods

We retrospectively analyzed a prospective multicenter ASD database comparing open and MIS correction techniques. Inclusion criteria were: age > 18 years with minimum 20° coronal lumbar Cobb angle, a minimum of three levels fused, and minimum 2-year follow-up. Patients were propensity matched for preoperative sagittal vertebral axis (SVA), pelvic incidence–lumbar lordosis (PI–LL), and number of levels fused. We included 189 patients from three propensity-matched subgroups of 63 patients each: (1) MIS: lateral or transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion (LIF) and percutaneous pedicle instrumentation, (2) Hybrid: MIS LIF with open posterior segmental fixation (PSF), and (3) OPEN: open posterior fixation ± osteotomies.

Results

With propensity matching, there were significant differences between groups in pre-op SVA or PI–LL (p > 0.05). The MIS group had significantly fewer levels fused (5.4) (0–14) than the OPEN group (7.4) (p = 0.002) (0–17). The rate of revision surgery was significantly different between the groups with a higher rate of revision (27 %) amongst the HYB group versus MIS = 11.1 %, and OPEN = 12.0 %. The most common reason for reoperation in the OPEN and HYB groups was a postoperative neurological deficit (7.9 and 11.1 %), respectively. The most common reason for reoperation in the MIS group was pseudoarthrosis (7.9 %).

Conclusions

Reoperation rates were not statistically different among the MIS, and OPEN surgical groups, but differed significantly on multivariate analysis with HYB group. The incidence of reoperations was twice as high in the Hybrid group compared to OPEN and MIS.


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