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Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics - 2026-01-01 - Journal Article

Spinal Deformity Characteristics Associated With Intraspinal Anomalies in a Population of Presumed Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis (AIS).

Mathes C, Woodhams W, Anderson J, Benvenuti M, Shaw KA

retrospective cohortLOE IIIn = 427N/A

Topics

pediatricsspine
PMID: 41612969DOI: 10.1097/BPO.0000000000003222View on PubMed ->

Key Takeaway

In 427 presumed AIS patients undergoing PSF, only 1.9% required neurosurgical intervention for intraspinal anomalies, and all had concomitant neurological symptoms, suggesting universal preoperative MRI may be replaceable by selective screening.

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Summary

This study examined whether radiographic deformity parameters predict intraspinal anomalies requiring neurosurgical intervention in presumed AIS patients undergoing PSF at a single tertiary pediatric center over 10 years. Of 427 patients with preoperative total-spine MRI, 33 (7.7%) had an intraspinal anomaly—most commonly syringomyelia (23) and Chiari I (14)—but only 8 (1.9%) required neurosurgical treatment. Left thoracic curve apex was the sole radiographic predictor of neurosurgical intervention (OR 0.25, 95% CI 0.1–0.67; sensitivity 37.5%, specificity 92.7%), and every patient requiring intervention also had neurological symptoms.

Key Limitation

All patients in this cohort already had a preoperative MRI ordered by the treating surgeon, introducing selection bias that prevents determination of the true background IA rate in an unscreened AIS surgical population.

Original Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Intraspinal anomalies (IA) are reported to occur in 7% to 19% of patients undergoing surgery for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS). However, these studies have not focused on IA that require neurosurgical intervention and have not assessed whether deformity characteristics predict their underlying presence. We hypothesized that specific radiographic deformity parameters would be associated with underlying IA in a population of presumed AIS patients undergoing posterior spinal fusion (PSF).

METHODS

A retrospective cohort study was performed over a 10-year period, identifying all patients with presumed AIS undergoing PSF who had a preoperative total spine MRI at a single, tertiary care pediatric hospital. The presence of an intraspinal anomaly was confirmed by MRI, and subsequent neurosurgical evaluation and intervention were recorded. Coronal and sagittal plane radiographic criteria were recorded, with a focus on previously identified predictive criteria. Radiographic criteria were compared against the whole population, as well as just those with thoracic deformities, seeking to identify factors associated with the presence of IA, as well as those associated with the need for neurosurgical intervention.

RESULTS

A total of 427 patients met the inclusion criteria (mean 14.6±2.3 y, 80.7% female). Of these, 33 patients (7.7%) were diagnosed with an IA: 23 syringomyelia, 14 Chiari I malformation, 4 tethered spinal cord, and 8 cerebellar tonsillar ectopia, with only 8 patients (1.9%) undergoing neurosurgical treatment. Thoracic deformities were predominant in 350 patients (81.7%), which was statistically similar for IA and AIS (84.9% vs. 83.3%). For the whole cohort, a left thoracic curve apex was significantly more likely in a patient with an underlying IA (IA: 21% vs.

AIS

6.2%; P <0.001) and was predictive on logistic regression analysis (odds ratio: 0.25, 95% CI: 0.1-0.67; P =0.003). Neurosurgical intervention was also associated with a left thoracic curve apex within the subset of thoracic-only deformities (IA: 38% vs.

AIS

6.5%, P =0.005) with a 37.5% sensitivity and 92.7% specificity. However, all patients requiring neurosurgical intervention also showed neurological symptoms, such as occipital headaches, sleep apnea, or extremity neurological symptoms.

CONCLUSIONS

The presence of an intraspinal anomaly occurred in 33 patients (7.7%) of this presumed AIS cohort, but only 8 patients (24%) required neurosurgical intervention (1.9% of the total cohort). Only a left thoracic apex was associated with the need for neurosurgical intervention. However, all patients requiring neurosurgical intervention presented with concomitant neurological symptoms. Selective MRI screening protocols incorporating patient sex, radiographic criteria, and neurological indicators may prove sufficient in contrast to universal MRI screening in children with presumed AIS undergoing PSF while minimizing health care expenditures.