Post-Operative Hyperextension Bracing Has the Potential to Reduce Proximal Junctional Kyphosis: A Propensity Matched Analysis of Braced versus Non-braced Cohorts

Author:

Shahi Pratyush1ORCID,Merrill Robert K.1,Pajak Anthony1,Samuel Justin T.1ORCID,Akosman Izzet1,Clohisy John C.1,Du Jerry1ORCID,Zhang Bo1,Elysee Jonathan1,Kim David N.1,Jordan Yusef1,Knopp Rachel L.1,Lovecchio Francis C.1,Kim Han Jo1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Spine Surgery, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, NY, USA

Abstract

Study Design Retrospective cohort. Objective Determine effects of bracing on proximal junctional kyphosis (PJK) after adult deformity correction. Methods Patients were identified from a single-surgeon dataset of posterior-only fusions for ASD (pelvis to UIV of T9-12) with a minimum of 1-year follow up. Starting in 2021, all lower thoracic fusions were braced using a hyperextension brace. Patients wore the brace at all times (unless in bed) for the first 6 weeks after surgery. A 1:1 propensity-match was performed based on age, number of levels, 3 column osteotomies, and magnitude of correction to identify a comparative non-braced cohort. Results 141 patients (113 non-brace, 28 brace) were evaluated. After matching, 56 patients were identified to form similar cohorts. Non-matched and matched groups had no statistically significant differences in demographics, comorbid conditions, surgical characteristics (except shorter operative time and lower EBL in the braced group), and preoperative radiographic parameters. For the overall cohort, the change in proximal junctional angle at 1-year was higher in the non-braced group (7.6° vs 8.1°, P = .047), and non-braced patients had a higher incidence of PJK at 1-year in both the overall cohort (36% vs 14%, P = .045) and matched cohort (43% vs 14%, P = .038). There was no difference in proximal junctional failure between groups. Conclusion This pilot study shows that our protocol for extension bracing may reduce rates of PJK. These findings can form the basis for future multi-center trials examining the effect of extension bracing on junctional complications.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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