Use of Patient-Specific Interbody Cages Through a Minimally Invasive Lateral Approach for Unstable Lumbar Spondylodiskitis.

Chun-Po Yen,David Ben-Israel,Bhargav Desai, Dennis Vollmer, Mark E Shaffrey,Justin S Smith

Operative neurosurgery (Hagerstown, Md.)(2024)

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Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES:Patients with diskitis/osteomyelitis who do not respond to medical treatment or develop spinal instability/deformity may warrant surgical intervention. Irregular bony destruction due to the infection can pose a challenge for spinal reconstruction. The authors report a lateral approach using patient-specific interbody cages combined with posterior or lateral instrumentation to achieve spinal reconstruction for spinal instability/deformity from spondylodiskitis. METHODS:This is a retrospective review of 4 cases undergoing debridement, lateral lumbar interbody fusion using patient-specific interbody cages, and supplemental lateral or posterior instrumentation for spinal instability/deformity after spondylodiskitis. The surgical technique is reported, as are the clinical and imaging outcomes. RESULTS:Four male patients with a mean age of 69 years comprised this study. One had lateral lumbar interbody fusion at L2/3 and 3 at L4/5. The mean hospital stay was 5.8 days. The mean follow-up was 8.5 months (range 6-12 months). There were no approach-related neurological injuries or complications. The mean visual analog scale back pain scores improved from 9.5 to 1.5, and the mean Oswestry disability index improved from 68.5 to 23 at the end of the follow-up. The mean lumbar lordosis increased from 18° to 51°. The segmental angle increased from 6.5° to 18°. The coronal shift was 2.8 cm preoperatively and 0.9 cm postoperatively. The coronal Cobb angle reduced from 8.8° preoperatively to 2.8° postoperatively. On postoperative computed tomography, all patients had interval development of bridging bone across the surgical level through or around the cage. None of them developed cage migration or subsidence. CONCLUSION:Patients with irregular bony destruction due to diskitis/osteomyelitis may benefit from patient-specific cages for spinal reconstruction to address spinal instability and deformity.
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