Normative Thoracic, Lumbar, Pelvic and Global Sagittal Alignment Parameters for Asymptomatic Adults: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of >35,900 Volunteers.
Methods: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Objective: To describe regional and global spinopelvic sagittal parameters in asymptomatic adults.
Background: Understanding normal alignment is important for management of patients with spinal deformities and essential for patient well-being following corrective surgery. To our knowledge, there exists no meta-analyses on normative alignment.
Methods: We searched PubMed for primary studies on asymptomatic individuals with normal spinal anatomy and no prior spinal intervention. The collected variables included: age, gender percentage, global thoracic kyphosis (T1-3 to T12 TK), regional TK (T4-5 to T12), lumbar lordosis to L5 (T12-L1 to L5, LL-L5), LL to S1 (T12-L1 to S1, LL-S1), sacral slope (SS), pelvic incidence (PI), pelvic tilt (PT), PI-LL mismatch, sagittal vertical axis (SVA), T1 pelvic angle (TPA), and spinosacral angle (SSA). Data was analyzed according to sex, age (20-40 vs. 40-60 vs. >60 yrs), ethnic group (Asian, Caucasian, Hispanic, Middle Eastern), and Asian subgroup (Chinese, Japanese, Korean).
Results: A total of 191 articles from 27 countries including 35,913 participants were reviewed: 16,125 men (44.9%), 18,222 women (50.7%), age range: 18-93 years were included. Regional TK and PT increased significantly in patients >60 compared to other groups. Globally, SVA, TPA, and changed with age in patients >60.
Conclusions: LL-S1, PI and PT were all higher in women. Regional TK, PT, PI-LL, SVA, TPA all increased with age, while LL-S1 and SSA decreased. Global TK, regional TK, LL-S1, PI, and PI-LL all had significant differences across broad ethnic groups, and LL-S1, PI, PT and SVA showed differences within Asian subgroup. Global alignment was largely equivalent across ethnic groups.