Author:
Beauséjour Marie,Vaillancourt François,Akoume Marie-Yvonne,Franco Anita,Parent Stefan,Labelle Hubert,Joncas Julie,Desbiens-Blais Frédérique,Mac-Thiong Jean-Marc,Roy-Beaudry Marjolaine,Aubin Carl-Éric,Moreau Alain
Abstract
Abstract
Purpose
Bracing is the treatment of choice for idiopathic scoliosis (IS), unfortunately factors underlying brace response remain unknown.
Clinicians are currently unable to identify patients who may benefit from bracing, and therefore, better molecular stratification is critically needed. The aim of this study is to evaluate IS patient outcomes at skeletal maturity in relation to biological endophenotypes, and determine specific endophenotypes associated to differential bracing outcomes. This is a retrospective cohort with secondary cross-sectional comparative studies.
Methods
Clinical and radiological data were collected from 563 IS patients, stratified into biological endophenotypes (FG1, FG2, FG3) based on a cell-based test. Measured outcomes were maximum Cobb angle at skeletal maturity, and if severe, spinal deformity (≥ 45°) or surgery was attained. Treatment success/failure was determined by standard progression thresholds (Cobb ≥ 45° or surgery; Cobb angle progression ≥ 6°). Multivariable analyses were performed to evaluate associations between endophenotypes and clinical outcome.
Results
Higher Cobb angles at maturity for FG1 and FG2 patients were observed (p = 0.056 and p = 0.05), with increased likelihood of ≥ 45° and/or surgery for FG1 (OR = 2.181 [1.002–4.749] and FG2 (OR = 2.141 [1.038–4.413]) compared to FG3. FG3 was 9.31 [2.58–33.61] and 5.63 [2.11–15.05] times more likely for bracing success at treatment termination and based on the < 6° progression criterion, respectively, compared to FG1.
Conclusion
Associations between biological endophenotypes and outcomes suggest differences in progression and/or bracing response among IS patients. Outcomes were most favorable in FG3 patients. The results pave the way for establishing personalized treatments, distinguishing who may benefit or not from treatment.
Funder
Research Chair in Movement Sciences of the University of Montreal
La Fondation Yves Cotrel de l’Institut de France
Paradigm Spine LLC/Fourth Dimension Spine LLC
The Canadian Institutes of Health Research
Depuy Spine Canada Inc. Academic Research Chair in Spinal Deformities
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Surgery
Cited by
2 articles.
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