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JAAOS - 2026-03-15 - Journal Article; Review

Modern Approaches and Time-Tested Methods in Managing Congenital Scoliosis in Children.

Brooks JT, Shalabi M, Johnston C

systematic reviewLOE Vn = N/AN/A

Topics

pediatricsspinetrauma
PMID: 41793770DOI: 10.5435/JAAOS-D-25-00165View on PubMed ->

Key Takeaway

Isolated hemivertebra excision with short-segment fusion is the mainstay for progressive congenital scoliosis curves <50° in young children, while definitive fusion is most reliable in patients ≥8–10 years old.

Summary Depth

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Summary

This narrative review synthesizes current and historical management strategies for congenital scoliosis in children, covering bracing, growth modulation, and surgical correction. Key surgical decision points include in situ fusion for mixed anomalies ≤5 segments, convex hemiepiphysiodesis ± concave growing rod for young patients without coronal imbalance, and hemivertebra excision with short-segment fusion for progressive curves <50°. Apical control techniques are highlighted as a recent addition to traditional growing rod constructs to mitigate crankshafting and adding-on.

Key Limitation

No original outcome data are presented; all recommendations rest on cited literature of variable quality without meta-analytic synthesis, limiting the strength of any specific numerical thresholds cited.

Original Abstract

Congenital scoliosis encompasses a highly variable, heterogenous group of vertebral anomalies, the mere presence of which is not an indication for intervention; documentation of curve progression is a prerequisite for treatment. Initial evaluation should include investigations to diagnose concomitant genitourinary and cardiac anomalies primarily, and the morphology of the vertebral anomaly should be classified for prognostic purposes. Although sometimes considered only a delaying tactic, bracing treatment and casting can have definite value in controlling flexible congenital curves. Surgical options include prophylactic in situ fusion for the child with mixed vertebral anomalies involving ≤5 segments and a small curve. For young patients without coronal imbalance and ≤5 anomalous segments, a convex growth arrest/hemiepiphysiodesis can be effective for growth modulation, and it can be augmented with a concave growing rod, either traditional or magnetically controlled to improve balance and correction. Although traditional growing rod methods have been used for congenital scoliosis, crankshafting and adding-on may occur due to lack of apical fixation. Thus, apical control techniques have been recently added to traditional growing rod to minimize this cause of curve progression. Finally, an isolated hemivertebra excision with short segment fusion is a mainstay of treatment for progressive curves <50° in young children. In the more mature patient, generally at least 8 to 10 years old, a single definitive correction and fusion gives the most reliable outcomes.