Accuracy and Safety of Pedicle Screw Placement for Treating Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis: A Narrative Review Comparing Available Techniques

Author:

Ansorge Alexandre1,Sarwahi Vishal2,Bazin Ludmilla3,Vazquez Oscar3,De Marco Giacomo3,Dayer Romain3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Spine Surgery, Lucerne Cantonal Hospital, 6000 Lucerne, Switzerland

2. Department of Pediatric Orthopedics, Cohen Children’s Medical Center, Northwell Health System, New Hyde Park, NY 11040, USA

3. Pediatric Orthopedic Unit, Geneva University Hospital, 1211 Geneva, Switzerland

Abstract

Posterior spinal fusion and segmental spinal instrumentation using pedicle screws (PS) is the most used procedure to correct adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. Computed navigation, robotic navigation, and patient-specific drill templates are available, besides the first described free-hand technique. None of these techniques are recognized as the gold standard. This review compares the PS placement accuracy and misplacement-related complication rates achieved with the techniques mentioned above. It further reports PS accuracy classifications and anatomic PS misplacement risk factors. The literature suggests a higher PS placement accuracy for robotic relative to computed navigation and for the latter relative to the free-hand technique (misplacement rates: 0.4–7.2% versus 1.9–11% versus 1.5–50.7%) using variable accuracy classifications. The reported PS-misplacement-related complication rates are, however, uniformly low (0–1.4%) for every technique, while robotic and computed navigation induce a roughly fourfold increase in the patient’s intraoperative radiation exposure relative to the free-hand technique with fluoroscopic implant positioning control. The authors, therefore, recommend dedicating robotic and computed navigation for complex deformities or revisions with altered landmarks, underline the need for a generally accepted PS accuracy classification, and advise against PS placement in grade 4 pedicles yielding higher misplacement rates (22.2–31.5%).

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Clinical Biochemistry

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