Dispelling the Dogma: upper-instrumented vertebrae of T5-T6 can achieve similar correction and shoulder balance with less blood loss than T2-T4 in select patients.

Journal: Journal Of Pediatric Orthopedics. Part B
Published:
Abstract

The choice of upper-instrumented vertebrae (UIV) for posterior spinal fusion (PSF) constructs is influenced by guidelines where UIV is T4 or more cephalad. In a cohort of patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) with thoracic curves, we sought to (a) compare postoperative shoulder balance for patients with UIV of T5-T6 versus T2-T4 and (b) evaluate curve and operative characteristics that lead to balance with a more caudal UIV. A single-institution AIS registry was queried for patients undergoing PSF from 2000 to 2017. Included were patients undergoing PSF for AIS, with Lenke 1 and 2 curves, and minimum 2-year follow-up. Shoulder balance was defined as: T1 tilt = 0 ± 5°, coracoid height difference (CHD) = 0 ± 1 cm. A total of 161 patients were included, mean follow-up was 47 months. Curves fused to T2-T4 had larger, stiffer preoperative proximal thoracic curves and were more likely to be classified as Lenke 2. Following PSF, there was no difference in final T1 tilt ( P  = 0.062) or final CHD ( P  = 0.176) between groups. Patients with a UIV of T5-T6 had shorter operative times ( P  < 0.001), less operative blood loss ( P  = 0.009), and similar complication rates ( P  = 0.344). In the T5-T6 cohort, 70.3% of patients achieved shoulder balance at the final follow-up. For thoracic AIS undergoing PSF, selecting a UIV of T5 or T6 can result in comparable postoperative shoulder balance in properly selected patients.

Authors
Matthew Labarge, William Waddell, Hani Chanbour, Byron Stephens, Jeffrey Martus, Gregory Mencio, Craig Louer
Relevant Conditions

Spinal Fusion, Scoliosis