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Spine Journal - 2026-06-01 - Journal Article

Pelvic fixation and spinopelvic realignment accelerate hip osteoarthritis following long-segment fusion: a 5-year retrospective study.

Kozaki T, Kozaki T, Hashizume H, Iwasaki H, Tsutsui S, Takami M, Nagata K, Ishimoto Y, Teraguchi M, Nishiyama D, Fukui D, Yamanaka M, Taiji R, Murata S, Kaimochi Y, Yamamoto Y, Hayashi T, Yamada H

retrospective cohortLOE IIIn = 290 patients (580 hips)5 years postoperative

Topics

spine
PMID: 41500386DOI: 10.1016/j.spinee.2026.01.003View on PubMed ->

Key Takeaway

Pelvic fixation carries an OR of 5.04 for hip OA progression in the full cohort and OR of 8.48 in long-fusion patients, with new-onset OA developing in 21.7% of the long-fusion subgroup at 5 years.

Summary Depth

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Summary

This study asked whether pelvic fixation and spinopelvic realignment accelerate hip OA after long-segment fusion by reviewing 290 patients with pre- and postoperative radiographs graded by Kellgren-Lawrence criteria. Overall OA progression occurred in 13.8%; independent risk factors included pelvic fixation (OR 5.04), female sex (OR 3.95), baseline KL grade (OR 2.49), pelvic incidence (OR 1.04/degree), and sacral slope correction (OR 1.04/degree). In the long-fusion subgroup (≥6 levels, n=122), new-onset OA reached 21.7% and pelvic fixation OR rose to 8.48.

Key Limitation

Radiographic OA grading by KL scale was performed retrospectively without blinded, independent readers, introducing potential measurement bias in the primary outcome.

Original Abstract

BACKGROUND CONTEXT

Spinopelvic fixation is commonly used to reduce the risk of distal adjacent segment disease in adult spinal deformity surgery. However, it may impose increased stress on the hip joint, potentially leading to hip osteoarthritis (OA). The concept of adjacent joint disease has been proposed to describe hip joint degeneration due to compensatory overload following rigid spinopelvic fixation, but longitudinal data supporting this are lacking.

PURPOSE

To investigate the prevalence and risk factors for the progression of hip OA after spinal fusion surgery, and to evaluate adjacent joint disease as a distinct pathological entity.

STUDY DESIGN/SETTING

Retrospective single-center cohort study with 5-year follow-up.

PATIENT SAMPLE

A total of 290 patients (580 hips) who underwent spinal fusion surgery between 2011 and 2018, and met inclusion/exclusion criteria.

OUTCOME MEASURES

Radiographic hip OA progression was defined by an increase in Kellgren-Lawrence (KL) grade at 5 years postoperatively. Spinopelvic parameters and hip morphology were also assessed.

METHODS

Radiographs were evaluated preoperatively, and at 1 month and 5 years postoperatively. Patients were divided based on the presence or absence of OA progression. Logistic regression was used to identify independent risk factors. A post hoc exploratory subgroup analysis was performed in patients with long fusion (≥6 levels) and baseline KL grade 0-1.

RESULTS

In the full cohort, OA progression was observed in 13.8%, and new-onset OA in 10.8%. Risk factors for progression in the overall cohort included female sex (odds ratio (OR): 3.95, p=.0048), pelvic incidence (PI) (OR: 1.04, p=.0012), sacral slope (SS) correction (OR: 1.04, p=.018), pelvic fixation (OR: 5.04, p=.0016), and baseline KL grade (OR: 2.49, p=.00001). In the long fusion subgroup (n = 122; 244 hips), new-onset OA was observed in 21.7%. Within this subgroup, pelvic fixation (OR: 8.48, p=.0069), larger SS correction (OR: 1.04, p=.027), and higher PI (OR: 1.05, p=.0017) remained significant predictors of hip OA.

CONCLUSIONS

Spinopelvic fixation was associated with an increased risk of hip OA progression, especially in female patients and those with high PI or large SS correction. These findings support adjacent joint disease as a clinically relevant entity and suggest the need for surgical caution and postoperative strategies to protect the hip joint in vulnerable individuals.