Revision surgery in proximal junctional kyphosis

M Cerpa, Z Sardar, L Lenke - European spine journal, 2020 - Springer
M Cerpa, Z Sardar, L Lenke
European spine journal, 2020Springer
Introduction Proximal junctional kyphosis (PJK) is a relatively common complication
following spinal deformity surgery that may require reoperation. Although isolating the
incidence is highly variable, in part due to the inconsistency in how PJK is defined, previous
studies have reported the incidence to be as high as 39% with revision surgery performed in
up to 47% of those with PJK. Despite the discordance in reported incidence, PJK remains a
constant challenge that can result in undesirable outcomes following adult spine deformity …
Introduction
Proximal junctional kyphosis (PJK) is a relatively common complication following spinal deformity surgery that may require reoperation. Although isolating the incidence is highly variable, in part due to the inconsistency in how PJK is defined, previous studies have reported the incidence to be as high as 39% with revision surgery performed in up to 47% of those with PJK. Despite the discordance in reported incidence, PJK remains a constant challenge that can result in undesirable outcomes following adult spine deformity surgery.
Methods
A comprehensive literature review using Medline and PubMed was performed. Keywords included “proximal junctional kyphosis,” “postoperative complications,” “spine deformity surgery,” “instrumentation failure,” and “proximal junctional failure” used separately or in conjunction.
Results
While the characterization of PJK is variable, a postoperative proximal junction sagittal Cobb angle at least 10°, 15°, or 20° greater than the measurement preoperatively, it is a consistent radiographic phenomenon that is well defined in the literature. While particular studies in the current literature may ascertain certain variables as significantly associated with the development of proximal junctional kyphosis where other studies do not, it is imperative to note that they are not all one in the same. Different patient populations, outcome variables assessed, statistical methodology, surgeon/surgical characteristics, etc. often make these analyses not completely comparable nor generalizable.
Conclusions
The goal of adult spine deformity surgery is to optimize patient outcomes and mitigate postoperative complications whenever possible. Due to the multifactorial nature of this complication, further research is required to enhance our understanding and eradicate the pathology. Patient optimization is the principal guideline in not only PJK prevention, but overall postoperative complication prevention.
Graphic abstract
These slides can be retrieved under Electronic Supplementary Material.
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