Special Poster Session 51st International Society for the Study of the Lumbar Spine Annual Meeting 2025

Do all symptomatic Adjacent Segment Diseases (ASD) require surgery? A Prognostic Classification and Predictors of Surgical treatment of Lumbar ASD (115402)

Rishi Kanna 1 , Ajoy Shetty 1 , S Rajasekaran 1
  1. Ganga Hospital, Coimbatore, TN, India

Introduction

Symptomatic Adjacent segment disease presents in myriad ways with varying clinic-radiological presentation but the optimal management and the factors that predict need for revision surgery are unclear.

Methodology

Consecutive patients (n=132) who experienced significant back or leg pain after an asymptomatic period (minimum 1 year) following a lumbar fusion were evaluated with dynamic radiographs and MRI. ASD was classified anatomically as proximal (86.3%), distal (12.1%, or combined (1.5%) and, sub-classified pathologically into six sub-types: Type 1: Disc prolapse (17.4%), Type 2: Disc degeneration with intra-discal instability (15.1%), Type 3: Anterolisthesis and facet instability (6.8%), Type 4: Retrolisthesis (25%), Type 5: Stenosis (21.9%) and Type 6: Combined types (13.6%).

Results

The mean duration between the index surgery and ASD was 5.9 ± 4.1 years. Surgery was required in 40.9% (54/132). Six factors were highly predictive of surgical treatment for ASD, viz., Diabetes mellitus (OR-4.3, p=0.007), ASD Type 1– disc prolapse (OR 6.3, p=0.018), ASD Type 2 intra-discal instability (OR-16.8206, p=0.003), ASD Type 3 6733f42ed273e-ISSLS+image+1.jpg- anterolisthesis (OR - 8.2998, p=0.043), Facet angle >75° (OR 37.6, p=0.02) and radiculopathy (OR 48.0, p=0.002). Retrolisthesis was the most benign type as 84.8% patients were managed conservatively (p= 0.016). Among proximal ASD, retrolisthesis was the most common subtype (28.9%) while disc prolapse was the most common subtype in distal ASD 37.5% (p=0.032).

Conclusion

The study classifies the versatile clinic-radiological presentation of ASD, and identifies factors that predicted the development of the different sub-types of ASD. Knowledge about the six clinic-radiological factors that predict the need for surgical treatment in ASD is beneficial.