Abstract
Purpose: To assess the change in disease-specific quality of life associated with operating on patients with AIS, compared to non operative patients.
Methods: The Climent Quality of Life for Spinal Deformities Scale (QLPSD)was administered prospectively to 119 patients undergoing scoliosis surgery and 42 patients followed for bracing or observation. Change in quality of life after two years (adjusted for baseline quality of life) was used to estimate the short term benefit of scoliosis surgery. Bracing status was also analyzed at baseline as a covariate to determine its effect on improvement in quality of life.
Results: The operated group experienced an increase in quality of life of 4.3 points (95% C.I. 0.69, 7.88) on the 105 point Climent scale. Although statistically significant, this increase was lower than the 5.5 point cutoff we had defined a priori as clinically significant. Among the operative patients, there was no difference in the quality of life score between those braced at baseline (91.2) and those not (90.5) (p=0.73). In non operative patients, those braced had a baseline quality of life score of 88.2, and those not braced 83.3, this difference was also not significant (p=0.13).
Conclusions: Scoliosis surgery results in a small increase, of questionable clinical significance, in spine-related quality of life at two years.
Funding : Commerical funding
Funding Parties : This trial was funded by (in alphabetical order) Canadian Institutes of Health Research, DePuyAcroMed-Johnson & Johnson Medical Products, and Synthes, Canada.
Correspondence should be addressed to Cynthia Vezina, Communications Manager, COA, 4150-360 Ste. Catherine St. West, Westmount, QC H3Z 2Y5, Canada