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Incidental Durotomies do not Impact Long-term Neurologic Function After Adult Spinal Deformity Surgery
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Incidental Durotomies do not Impact Long-term Neurologic Function After Adult Spinal Deformity Surgery

Ahmed Sulieman, Maxwell Sahhar, Indeevar Beeram, Bassel G Diebo, Virginie Lafage, Renaud Lafage, Breton G Line, D Kojo Hamilton, Richard Hostin, Peter G Passias, …
Spine (Philadelphia, Pa. 1976)
03/13/2026
PMID: 41844195

Abstract

neurologic outcomes patient-reported outcomes adult spinal deformity complications scoliosis kyphosis length of stay revision surgery lower-extremity motor score Incidental durotomy three-column osteotomy
Retrospective review of multicenter data. To compare long-term neurologic recovery in patients with and without incidental durotomy (hereafter, "durotomy") after adult spinal deformity surgery. Durotomy is a common complication of adult spinal deformity surgery and is typically associated with technical challenges during the procedure. Using a prospectively collected database, we included 1452 patients (73% female; mean age, 60±14 y) who underwent adult spinal deformity surgery from 2008-2020 at 22 US centers. We compared patients with and without durotomy with respect to demographic characteristics, surgical variables, and neurologic outcomes at baseline and at 1 and 2 years postoperatively. Multivariate analysis compared neurologic complications and length of stay (LOS) between the groups. P<.05 was considered significant. Durotomy occurred in 121 patients (8.3%). Patients with durotomy were more likely to have undergone revision surgery (P<.001) and had higher Charlson Comorbidity Index values (P=.029) than those who did not. Patients with durotomy had higher estimated blood loss, longer operative time, more frequent 3-column osteotomies, and longer LOS (all, P<.001). Lower-extremity motor scores did not differ between patients with durotomy and those without at 1 and 2 years postoperatively. The incidence of neurologic, medical, and surgical complications did not differ significantly between the 2 groups. Patients with durotomy had a higher rate of inpatient return to the operating room (5.0%) than those without (2.0%) (P=.04). On multivariate analysis, there were no differences between groups in lower-extremity motor scores, neurologic complications, or LOS. Incidental durotomy during adult spinal deformity surgery was associated with greater intraoperative complexity and transient sensory symptoms but did not adversely affect long-term motor recovery, neurologic complications, or patient-reported outcomes. These findings suggest durotomy is a manageable complication without lasting functional consequences.

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