Long-Term Treatment Effect and Predictability of Spinopelvic Alignment after Surgical Correction of Adult Spine Deformity (ASD) with Patient-Specific Spine Rods (PSSR)

2019 
STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective case series. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the short long-term treatment effect (TE) of spinopelvic parameters after surgical correction of adult spine deformity (ASD) utilizing preoperative planning and patient-specific spine rods (PSSRs), and to assess the correspondence between planned and real outcomes. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: PSSR have been used in ASD correction for the last decade. However, a TE and predictability of spinopelvic alignment at long-term follow-up has not been studied. METHODS: Inclusion criteria: male or female; age more than 20 years; correction of ASD with PSSR; 24-month follow-up (or revision surgery). Studied parameters: sagittal vertical axis; lumbar lordosis (LL); pelvic tilt (PT); sacral slope; pelvic incidence (PI); and PI-LL. The measurement error, TE (the differences between postoperative and preoperative values), standardized TE, and predictability of the studied parameters assessed. The variables included categorical (optimal/nonoptimal) and continuous obtained by direct measurements and weighted by individual optimal values. Statistical significance was set at P
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