Spinal dysraphism in exstrophy: a single-center study of a 39-year prospective database

Author:

Judy Brendan F.1,Materi Joshua1,Lee Ryan P.1,Tracz Jovanna A.1,Patel Jaimin1,Weber-Levine Carly1,Crigger Chad2,Mistry Preeya2,Gearhart John P.2,Jackson Eric M.1

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Neurosurgery and

2. Urology, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland

Abstract

OBJECTIVE The two main objectives of this study were to explore the rate of spinal dysraphism within bladder and cloacal exstrophy and to analyze the relationship between spinal dysraphism surgery, including timing of spinal dysraphism surgery, with urological and neurological outcomes. METHODS A prospectively maintained IRB-approved database of pediatric exstrophy patients treated from 1982 to 2021 was retrospectively reviewed for patients with spinal dysraphism. Spinal dysraphism was categorized into the following 7 subtypes: lipoma-based closed defect, myelomeningocele, meningocele, diastematomyelia, myelocystocele, low-lying conus with tethered cord/fatty filum, and sacral bony defect. Other factors assessed included patient demographic characteristics, type of spinal dysraphism procedure, reoperation, complication, presence of other neurological problems (e.g., hydrocephalus, Chiari malformation), neurological status, and urological function. RESULTS Analysis revealed that 114/1401 patients had coexisting spinal dysraphism. Of these 114, sufficient records including type of dysraphism were available for 54. Spinal dysraphism was most common within cloacal exstrophy (83.3% [45/54 patients]), followed by cloacal exstrophy variants (9.3% [5/54]), classic bladder exstrophy (3.7% [2/54]), and classic bladder exstrophy variants (3.7% [2/54]). Within spinal dysraphism, lipoma-based closed defects (63.0% [34/54]) and low-lying conus with tethered cord/fatty filum (11.1% [6/54]) were most common. Hydrocephalus and Chiari malformation occurred in 24.1% (13/54) and 11.1% (6/54) of patients. All 13 patients with hydrocephalus underwent shunt placement. Among those who underwent neurosurgical intervention, the complication rate for spinal dysraphism was 14.6% (7/48). Motor function data were available for 41 patients and revealed that motor function declined for 2/41 (4.8%) patients and improved for 6/41 (14.6%) after neurosurgery. There was no statistical difference in lower-extremity motor outcome related to timing of neurosurgery and exstrophy closure. CONCLUSIONS The authors have reported the surgical management and outcomes of patients with exstrophy and coexisting spinal dysraphism (n = 54). In 54 patients, spinal dysraphism was most common in the subset of patients with cloacal exstrophy (83.3%). Lipoma-based closed defects (63.0%) and low-lying conus with tethered cord/fatty filum (11.1%) were the most common, and the rates of hydrocephalus and Chiari malformation were 24.1% and 11.1%, respectively. There was no difference in lower-extremity motor outcome related to timing of neurosurgery and exstrophy closure.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Subject

General Medicine

Reference50 articles.

1. The exstrophy-epispadias complex;Ebert AK,2009

2. Epidemiology of bladder and cloacal exstrophies in New York State, 1983-1999;Caton AR,2007

3. Patterns of spinal cord malformation in cloacal exstrophy;Kumar N,2021

4. Surgical management of myelocystocele: a single-center experience with long-term functional outcomes;Behbahani M,2022

5. Occult spinal dysraphism: lessons learned by retrospective analysis of 149 surgical cases about natural history, surgical indications, urodynamic testing, and intraoperative neurophysiological monitoring;Valentini LG,2013

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