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Reoperation Rates According to Surgical Approach After Operation for Degenerative Cervical Pathology in Patients With Athetoid Cerebral Palsy: A Nationwide Cohort Studyopen access

Authors
Yang, Jae JunChoi, Jun YoungLee, Dong-HoHwang, Chang JuCho, Jae HwanPark, Sehan
Issue Date
Jan-2025
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Keywords
athetoid cerebral palsy; cervical spine surgery; revision operation; anterior fusion; posterior fusion; combined fusion; laminoplasty; national cohort study
Citation
Global Spine Journal, v.15, no.1, pp 21 - 30
Pages
10
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Global Spine Journal
Volume
15
Number
1
Start Page
21
End Page
30
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/21704
DOI
10.1177/21925682241247486
ISSN
2192-5682
2192-5690
Abstract
Study Design National population-based cohort study.Objective The overall complication rate for patients with athetoid cerebral palsy (CP) undergoing cervical surgery is significantly higher than that of patients without CP. The study was conducted to compare the reoperation and complication rates of anterior fusion, posterior fusion, combined fusion, and laminoplasty for degenerative cervical myelopathy/radiculopathy in patients with athetoid cerebral palsy.Methods The Korean Health Insurance Review and Assessment Service national database was used for analysis. Data from patients diagnosed with athetoid CP who underwent cervical spine operations for degenerative causes between 2002 and 2020 were reviewed. Patients were categorized into four groups for comparison: anterior fusion, posterior fusion, combined fusion, and laminoplasty.Results A total of 672 patients were included in the study. The overall revision rate was 21.0% (141/672). The revision rate was highest in the anterior fusion group (42.7%). The revision rates of combined fusion (11.1%; hazard ratio [HR], .335; P = .002), posterior fusion (13.8%; HR, .533; P = .030) were significantly lower than that of anterior fusion. Revision rate of laminoplasty (13.1%; HR, .541; P = .240) was also lower than anterior fusion although the result did not demonstrate statistical significance.Conclusion Anterior fusion presented the highest reoperation risk after cervical spine surgery reaching 42.7% in patients with athetoid CP. Therefore, anterior-only fusion in patients with athetoid CP should be avoided or reserved for strictly selected patients. Combined fusion, with the lowest revision risk at 11.1%, could be safely applied to patients with athetoid CP.
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