Authors
Omar Taha, Matthew Weintraub, Mehdi M Elfilali, Miles J Bomback, Erik D Williams, Michael W Brown, Alexander M Park, Juan Rodriguez-Olaverri, Laurel C Blakemore, Firoz Miyanji, Taemin Oh, Pediatric Spine Study Group (PSSG), Michael G Vitale
Published in
Spine deformity. Jun 17, 2026. Epub Jun 17, 2026.
Abstract
This study evaluates radiographic outcomes and reoperations in patients undergoing anterior vertebral body tethering (VBT) of the lumbar spine.
A retrospective review of an EOS database identified pediatric patients who underwent lumbar VBT. Demographic and surgical data were collected, as well as radiographic and clinical outcomes including complications, reoperations, and conversion to posterior spinal fusion (PSIF). Analyses included paired t-tests, Wilcoxon signed-rank tests and chi-square.
Thirty-two patients with idiopathic scoliosis who underwent thoracolumbar VBT with 2-year follow-up were included. Mean age at surgery was 13.7 ± 1.8 years (mean follow-up 2.0 ± 0.2 years); median Sanders score was 3 (50% ≤ 3). Lumbar Cobb decreased from 48° ± 12 to 20° ± 10 postoperatively (p < 0.001) with correction loss to 29° ± 12 at 2 years (p < 0.001). Tethered Cobb decreased from 46° ± 8 to 13° ± 9 postoperatively (p < 0.001), with correction loss to 17° ± 12 at 2 years (p = 0.284). At 2 years, 31% had > 5° of correction loss and 84% had a tethered Cobb < 30°. Correction loss did not differ by Sanders stage (p = 0.92). Seven patients (23.3%) demonstrated > 5° of additional curve correction postoperatively. Four patients (12.5%) had unplanned reoperation and five others (15.6%) required PSIF: 28.1% total reoperation rate.
Lumbar VBT provided substantial initial correction with maintenance of correction across the tethered levels at 2-year follow-up. While most patients maintained a tethered Cobb angle < 30° at 2 years, 28.1% of patients underwent reoperation (12.5% UPROR; 15.6% PSIF conversion). Longer follow-up in larger multicenter cohorts is required to more accurately define lumbar VBT durability and conversion-to-fusion risk.
IV.
PMID:
42310286
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 18 Jun 2026.
Read full publication at:
Please sign in
to see all details.
Advertisement
Stats
- Recommendations n/a n/a positive of 0 vote(s)
- Views 1
- Comments 0