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      Management of spinal deformities and tibial pseudarthrosis in children with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF-1)

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          Abstract

          Summary of background data

          The skeletal system is affected in up to 60% of patients with neurofibromatosis type 1. The most commonly observed entities are spinal deformities and tibial dysplasia. Early recognition of radiologic osseous dystrophy signs is of utmost importance because worsening of the deformities without treatment is commonly observed and surgical intervention is often necessary. Due to the relative rarity and the heterogenic presentation of the disease, evidence regarding the best surgical strategy is still lacking.

          Purpose

          To report our experience with the treatment of skeletal manifestations in pediatric patients with (neurofibromatosis type 1) NF-1 and to present the results with our treatment protocols.

          Materials and methods

          This is a retrospective, single expert center study on children with spinal deformities and tibial dysplasia associated with NF-1 treated between 2006 and 2020 in a tertiary referral institution.

          Results

          Spinal deformity: Thirty-three patients ( n = 33) were included. Mean age at index surgery was 9.8 years. In 30 patients (91%), the deformity was localized in the thoracic and/or lumbar spine, and in 3 patients (9%), there was isolated involvement of the cervical spine. Eleven patients (33%) received definitive spinal fusion as an index procedure and 22 (67%) were treated by means of “growth-preserving” spinal surgery. Halo-gravity traction before index surgery was applied in 11 patients (33%). Progression of deformity was stopped in all patients and a mean curve correction of 60% (range 23–98%) was achieved. Mechanical problems with instrumentation requiring revision surgery were observed in 55% of the patients treated by growth-preserving techniques and in none of the patients treated by definitive fusion. One patient (3%) developed a late incomplete paraplegia due to a progressive kyphotic deformity.

          Tibial dysplasia: The study group comprised of 14 patients. In 5 of them (36%) pathological fractures were present on initial presentation. In the remaining 9 patients (64%), anterior tibial bowing without fracture was observed initially. Four of them ( n = 4, 28%) subsequently developed a pathologic fracture despite brace treatment. Surgical treatment was indicated in 89% of the children with pathological fractures. This involved resection of the pseudarthrosis, autologous bone grafting, and intramedullary nailing combined with external fixation in some of the cases. In 50% of the patients, bone morphogenic protein was used “off-label” in order to promote union. Healing of the pseudarthrosis was achieved in all of the cases and occurred between 5 to 13 months after the index surgical intervention. Four of the patients treated surgically needed more than one surgical intervention in order to achieve union; one patient had a re-fracture. All patients had a good functional result at last follow-up.

          Conclusion

          Early surgical intervention is recommended for the treatment dystrophic spinal deformity in children with NF-1. Good and sustainable curve correction without relevant thoracic growth inhibition can be achieved with growth-preserving techniques alone or in combination with short spinal fusion at the apex of the curve. Preoperative halo-gravity traction is a safe and very effective tool for the correction of severe and rigid deformity in order to avoid neurologic injury. Fracture union in tibial dysplasia with satisfactory functional results can be obtained in over 80% of the children by means of surgical resection of the pseudarthrosis, intramedullary nailing, and bone grafting. Wearing a brace until skeletal maturity is achieved is mandatory in order to minimize the risk of re-fracture.

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          Most cited references41

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          Pulmonary function following early thoracic fusion in non-neuromuscular scoliosis.

          While early spinal fusion may halt progressive deformity in young children with scoliosis, it does not facilitate lung growth and, in certain children, it can result in thoracic insufficiency syndrome. The purpose of this study was to determine pulmonary function at intermediate-term follow-up in patients with scoliosis who underwent thoracic fusion before the age of nine years. Patients who had thoracic spine fusions before the age of nine years with a minimum five-year follow-up underwent pulmonary function testing. Forced vital capacity, forced expiratory volume in one second, and maximum inspiratory pressure were measured and compared with age-matched normal values. Patients with neuromuscular disease, skeletal dysplasias, or preexisting pulmonary disease were excluded, while those with rib malformations were included. The relationships between forced vital capacity and age at the time of surgery, length of follow-up, extent of the fusion, proximal level of the fusion, and revision surgery were studied. Twenty-eight patients underwent evaluation. Twenty patients had congenital scoliosis, three had idiopathic scoliosis, three had scoliosis associated with neurofibromatosis, one had congenital kyphosis, and one had syndromic scoliosis. Seventeen patients had one spinal surgery, while eleven had additional procedures. The average age of the patients was 3.3 years at the time of surgery and 14.6 years at the time of follow-up. The average extent of the thoracic spine fused was 58.7%. The average forced vital capacity was 57.8% of age-matched normal values, and the average forced expiratory volume in one second was 54.7%. The forced vital capacity was <50% of normal in twelve of the twenty-eight patients, and two required respiratory support, implying that substantial restrictive lung disease was present. With the numbers studied, no significant correlation could be detected between the age at the time of fusion or the length of follow-up and pulmonary function. The extent of the spine fused correlated with the forced vital capacity (p = 0.01, r = -0.46). Fusions in the proximal aspect of the spine were found to be associated with diminished pulmonary function as eight of twelve patients with a proximal fusion level of T1 or T2 had a forced vital capacity of <50%, but only four of sixteen patients with a fusion beginning caudad to T2 had a forced vital capacity of <50% (p = 0.0004, r = 0.62). Patients with proximal thoracic deformity who require fusion of more than four segments, especially those with rib anomalies, are at the highest risk for the development of restrictive pulmonary disease. Pulmonary function tests should be performed for all patients who have an early fusion. The pursuit of alternative procedures to treat early spinal deformity is merited.
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            The characteristics of thoracic insufficiency syndrome associated with fused ribs and congenital scoliosis.

            1. Thoracic insufficiency syndrome is the inability of the thorax to support normal respiration or lung growth. 2. The rare condition of fused ribs and congenital scoliosis may result in a three-dimensional thoracic deformity with adverse effects on thoracic growth and function with development of thoracic insufficiency syndrome. 3. The normal thorax is defined by two characteristics: normal, stable volume and the ability to change that volume. Volume depends on the width and depth of the rib cage, and the thoracic spine provides height. The ability to change volume, termed thoracic function, is provided by the diaphragm and the secondary muscles of respiration. 4. On radiographs, the loss of the vertical height of the lung of the concave, restricted hemithorax is defined by the percentage of space available for the lung. 5. Spine rotation causes a windswept thorax, with both restriction of the volume of the convex hemithorax and restriction of the motion of the involved ribs. 6. Constrictive three-dimensional deformity of the thorax may cause extrinsic, restrictive lung disease. 7. Progressive thoracic insufficiency syndrome is diagnosed on the basis of clinical signs of respiratory insufficiency, loss of chest wall mobility as demonstrated by the thumb excursion test, worsening indices of three-dimensional thoracic deformity on radiographs and computed tomography scans, or a relative decline in percent predicted vital capacity due to thoracic "failure to thrive," as demonstrated by pulmonary function tests. 8. Treatment of progressive thoracic insufficiency syndrome should provide an acute increase in the thoracic volume with stabilization of any flail chest-wall defects and maintain these improvements as the patient grows, without the need for spine fusion.
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              Prevalence of scoliosis in neurofibromatosis.

              Experience in a comprehensive, multispecialty neurofibromatosis clinic leads the authors to suggest that the association of spinal deformity with neurofibromatosis is less frequent than usually assumed. Previously reported statistics may be partly attributed to preselection of patients seen by spinal surgeons, and to the predominant referral of patients having severe manifestations of neurofibromatosis. A diagnosis of neurofibromatosis 1, based on National Institutes of Health criteria, is confirmed for two hundred twenty patients at the clinic. Twenty-three of these patients have structural scoliosis. Nine patients have idiopathic type curves, eight have dystrophic scoliosis, four have dystrophic kyphoscoliosis, and two have dystrophic lordoscoliosis. The authors believe that 10% is representative of the true prevalence of spinal deformity in an otherwise unselected cross section of neurofibromatosis patients.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                kiril.mladenov@kinderkrankenhaus.net
                Journal
                Childs Nerv Syst
                Childs Nerv Syst
                Child's Nervous System
                Springer Berlin Heidelberg (Berlin/Heidelberg )
                0256-7040
                1433-0350
                1 July 2020
                1 July 2020
                2020
                : 36
                : 10
                : 2409-2425
                Affiliations
                GRID grid.440279.c, ISNI 0000 0004 0393 823X, Altona Children’s Hospital – AKK/UKE, ; Bleickenallee 38, 22763 Hamburg, Germany
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0003-2875-6291
                Article
                4775
                10.1007/s00381-020-04775-4
                8346390
                32613421
                5558c69c-0589-49f6-9092-9ba39a1ac3cf
                © The Author(s) 2020, corrected publication 2021

                Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

                History
                : 18 June 2020
                : 23 June 2020
                Categories
                Annual Issue Paper
                Custom metadata
                © Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2020

                Neurology
                neurofibromatosis type 1,dystrophic scoliosis,congenital pseudarthrosis of the tibia

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