TY - JOUR
T1 - High Preoperative Body Mass Index Is Associated With Implant Breakage in Patients Treated With Magnetically Controlled Growing Rods for Early-onset Scoliosis
AU - Pediatric Spine Study Group
AU - Saarinen, Antti J.
AU - Andras, Lindsay
AU - Boachie-Adjei, Oheneba
AU - Cahill, Patrick
AU - Guillaume, Tenner
AU - Snyder, Brian
AU - Sponseller, Paul
AU - Sturm, Peter
AU - Vitale, Michael
AU - Helenius, Ilkka
AU - Anderson, John
AU - Bauer, David
AU - Cheung, Kenneth
AU - Clement, Carter
AU - Crawford, Haemish
AU - Groves, Mari
AU - Hwang, Steven
AU - Kadado, Allen
AU - Karlen, Judson
AU - Kwan, Kenny
AU - Lark, Robert
AU - Louer, Craig
AU - Mitchell, Stuart
AU - Morash, Kevin
AU - Ouellet, Jean
AU - Segar, Anand
AU - Shah, Suken
AU - Shirley, Otis
AU - Stone, Joe
AU - Weinstein, Stuart
AU - Wilson, Nichola
AU - Lebel, David
AU - Balsara, Karl
AU - Borden, Timothy
AU - Braga, Bruno
AU - Buckland, Aaron
AU - Burke, Rebecca
AU - Drake, Luke
AU - Fehnel, Katie
AU - Roberto, Rolando Figueroa
AU - Ghazi, John
AU - Haber, Lawrence
AU - Hughes, Michael
AU - Iqbal, Omar
AU - Jea, Andrew
AU - Landrum, Matthew
AU - Le, Hai
AU - Lullo, Brett
AU - Mathew, Smitha
AU - Miller, Kyle
AU - Montgomery, Blake
AU - Oh, Taimin
AU - Orland, Keith
AU - Rushton, Paul
AU - Shannon, Brett
AU - Shaw, Aaron
AU - Shea, Graham
AU - Simmonds, Andrea
AU - Tuason, Dominick
AU - Van Nortwick, Sara
AU - Bauer, Jennifer
AU - Beauchamp, Eduardo
AU - Bennett, James
AU - Brockmeyer, Douglas
AU - Bumpass, David
AU - El-Bromboly, Yehia
AU - Erickson, Mark
AU - Guillaume, Tenner
AU - Ihnow, Stephanie
AU - Iyer, Rajiv
AU - Jain, Viral
AU - Kelly, Brian
AU - Klatt, Joshua
AU - Martin, Jonathan
AU - Mcquerry, Jessica
AU - Miller, Daniel
AU - Pellise, Ferran
AU - Perra, Joseph
AU - Price, Nigel
AU - Schmitz, Michael
AU - Snyder, Brian
AU - Szczodry, Michal
AU - Tanaka, Tomoko
AU - Tetreault, Tyler
AU - Smith, John
AU - Betz, Randy
AU - Crawford, Alvin
AU - Demirkiran, Gokhan
AU - Emans, John
AU - Johnston, Charles
AU - Karlin, Lawrence
AU - Kawakami, Noriaki
AU - Mccarthy, Richard
AU - Perez-Grueso, Francisco
AU - Roye, David
AU - Shufflebarger, Harry
AU - Peter, Sturm
AU - George, Thompson
AU - Yazici, Muharrem
AU - Accousti, William
AU - Ahn, Edward
AU - Akoto, Harry
AU - Albanese, Stephen
AU - Bellaire, Laura
AU - Birch, Craig
AU - Boachie-Adjei, Oheneba
AU - Bonfield, Chris
AU - Bouton, Daniel
AU - Brassard, Felix
AU - Catanzano, Anthony
AU - Chemaly, Olivier
AU - Cheung, Jason
AU - Cho, Robert
AU - Christman, Tyler
AU - Couture, Daniel
AU - Dahl, Benny
AU - Devito, Dennis
AU - Diab, Mohammad
AU - Drake, Dan
AU - Field, Antony
AU - Gabos, Peter
AU - Garcia, Alejandro Peiro
AU - Gardner, Adrian
AU - George, Stephen
AU - Gerow, Frank
AU - Gonda, David
AU - Hammerberg, Kim
AU - Hedequist, Daniel
AU - Herrera, Jose
AU - Holt, Josh
AU - Howard, Jason
AU - Hresko, Tim
AU - Illingworth, Kenneth
AU - Jones, Morgan
AU - Kelly, Derek
AU - Kelly, Michael
AU - Koljonen, Paul
AU - Labelle, Hubert
AU - Lavelle, William
AU - Lenke, Lawrence
AU - Lew, Sean
AU - Mac Thiong, Jean Marc
AU - Mackenzie, Stuart
AU - Mackintosh, Erin
AU - Mangano, Francesco
AU - Marks, David
AU - Marquez-Lara, Alejandro Jose
AU - Martus, Jeffrey
AU - Mehta, Jwalant
AU - Metz, Lionel
AU - Miller, Nancy
AU - Miyanji, Firoz
AU - Mundis, Greg
AU - Nelson, Susan
AU - Newton, Peter
AU - Ede, Matthew Newton
AU - Nguyen, Cynthia
AU - Niazi, Toba
AU - Pereira, Susana Nunez
AU - Parent, Stefan
AU - Pizones, Javier
AU - Poon, Selina
AU - Ramchandran, Subaraman
AU - Ramirez, Norman
AU - Rodriguez, Luis
AU - Sanchez, Marquez
AU - Jose, Miguel
AU - Sanders, James
AU - Sayama, Christina
AU - Schulz, Jacob
AU - Schwend, Richard
AU - Skalak, Timothy
AU - Speirs, Joshua
AU - Sukkarieh, Hamdi
AU - Thometz, John
AU - Tice, Andrew
AU - Upasani, Vidyadhar
AU - Vialle, Raphael
AU - Wang, Shengru
AU - Warner, Bill
AU - Wrubel, David
AU - Wu, Nan
AU - Yankey, Kwadwo
AU - Zhang, Terry Jianguo
AU - Aubin, Carl Eric
AU - Carry, Patrick
AU - Mayer, Oscar
AU - White, Rachel
AU - Akbarnia, Behrooz
AU - Anderson, Richard
AU - Andras, Lindsay
AU - Blakemore, Laurel
AU - Cahill, Pat
AU - El-Hawary, Ron
AU - Flynn, Jack
AU - Glotzbecker, Michael
AU - Gomez, Jaime
AU - Hardesty, Christina
AU - Hogue, Grant
AU - Luhmann, Scott
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2025 The Author(s).
PY - 2025/9/1
Y1 - 2025/9/1
N2 - Introduction: Magnetically controlled growing rods (MCGRs) have become the current standard in the growth-friendly treatment of patients with early-onset scoliosis (EOS). MCGRs allow noninvasive lengthenings with external lengthening device and reduce the need for surgical procedures. The association of preoperative body mass index (BMI) and the outcomes of the MCGR treatment is not well known. Methods: Prospectively collected international database was reviewed for EOS patients treated with MCGR. Patients without preoperative BMI data or follow-up < 2 years were excluded. Patients were classified as healthy weight, overweight, and underweight using Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) growth charts. Quality of life was assessed using EOSQ-24. Results were analyzed from the 2-year follow-up. Results: A total of 663 patients were categorized into underweight (n = 91), healthy weight (n = 417), and overweight (n = 155) groups. There were no significant differences in major curve correction or thoracic height increase among the BMI groups, irrespective of etiology. Distribution of BMI categories differed significantly by etiology (P = 0.009), with lower healthy weight proportions in the syndromic group (92/167, 55%) compared with idiopathic (131/177, 74%) (adjusted P = 0.004), and a higher underweight proportion in neuromuscular (36/244, 15%) compared with idiopathic (15/177, 8.5%) (adjusted P = 0.044). Higher BMI z-scores were associated with an increased incidence of complications, including implant-related complications (RR 1.1, 95% CI 1.0-1.3) and implant breakage (RR 1.3, 95% CI 1.1-1.7). Healthy weight and underweight patients experienced lower overall complication rates compared with overweight patients. Implant-related complications were less common in underweight patients compared with overweight patients (RR 0.45, 95% CI 0.20-0.90). Higher BMI z-score was a significant predictor of implant breakage, whereas preoperative major curve, kyphosis, and etiology were not. EOSQ-24 scores did not differ significantly among BMI groups, and changes in scores were comparable across groups during follow-up. Conclusion: BMI status did not influence curve correction, thoracic height increase, or EOSQ-24 outcomes in early-onset scoliosis patients. However, the higher incidence of implant breakage in overweight patients suggests that elevated BMI should be carefully considered when planning treatment.
AB - Introduction: Magnetically controlled growing rods (MCGRs) have become the current standard in the growth-friendly treatment of patients with early-onset scoliosis (EOS). MCGRs allow noninvasive lengthenings with external lengthening device and reduce the need for surgical procedures. The association of preoperative body mass index (BMI) and the outcomes of the MCGR treatment is not well known. Methods: Prospectively collected international database was reviewed for EOS patients treated with MCGR. Patients without preoperative BMI data or follow-up < 2 years were excluded. Patients were classified as healthy weight, overweight, and underweight using Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) growth charts. Quality of life was assessed using EOSQ-24. Results were analyzed from the 2-year follow-up. Results: A total of 663 patients were categorized into underweight (n = 91), healthy weight (n = 417), and overweight (n = 155) groups. There were no significant differences in major curve correction or thoracic height increase among the BMI groups, irrespective of etiology. Distribution of BMI categories differed significantly by etiology (P = 0.009), with lower healthy weight proportions in the syndromic group (92/167, 55%) compared with idiopathic (131/177, 74%) (adjusted P = 0.004), and a higher underweight proportion in neuromuscular (36/244, 15%) compared with idiopathic (15/177, 8.5%) (adjusted P = 0.044). Higher BMI z-scores were associated with an increased incidence of complications, including implant-related complications (RR 1.1, 95% CI 1.0-1.3) and implant breakage (RR 1.3, 95% CI 1.1-1.7). Healthy weight and underweight patients experienced lower overall complication rates compared with overweight patients. Implant-related complications were less common in underweight patients compared with overweight patients (RR 0.45, 95% CI 0.20-0.90). Higher BMI z-score was a significant predictor of implant breakage, whereas preoperative major curve, kyphosis, and etiology were not. EOSQ-24 scores did not differ significantly among BMI groups, and changes in scores were comparable across groups during follow-up. Conclusion: BMI status did not influence curve correction, thoracic height increase, or EOSQ-24 outcomes in early-onset scoliosis patients. However, the higher incidence of implant breakage in overweight patients suggests that elevated BMI should be carefully considered when planning treatment.
KW - body mass index
KW - obesity
KW - scoliosis
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105005709024
U2 - 10.1097/BPO.0000000000002988
DO - 10.1097/BPO.0000000000002988
M3 - Article
C2 - 40323772
AN - SCOPUS:105005709024
SN - 0271-6798
VL - 45
SP - 492
EP - 498
JO - Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics
JF - Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics
IS - 8
ER -