Our aim was to analyze complications and risk factors for cervical vertebral body replacement (VBR) with expandable titanium cages (ETC). Fifty patients; 22 women and 28 men, mean age 61years, undergoing cervical VBR from 2010 to 2015 were analyzed. Complications were stratified by hardware-association (HA). Univariate and multivariate logistic regression was used to identify independent risk factors. Single, two and three level corpectomies were performed in 32, 15 and 3 patients respectively. A circumferential approach was necessary in 16 cases. At mean follow-up (7.3 months) 66% of patients had recovered. Radiological data showed a significant distraction (2.60mm, p<0.0001) and lordosis (5°, p=0.001). Twenty-three patients experienced 42 complications; 18 HA, 24 non-HA and 24% needed revision surgery. The number of corpectomy levels and surgical approach significantly correlated with the risk of complications (p=0.001), especially non-HA complications (p=0.002). On multivariate analysis, only the number of corpectomy levels (p<0.02, odds ratio 5.48, 95% CI 1.31-22.91) was a significant predictor of complications. We conclude that ETC are efficacious devices for cervical spine VBR, however, when used for more than 1 level, the corpectomy complication rate significantly increases.
Keywords: Corpectomy; Expandable titanium cage; Hardware-associated complications; Vertebral body replacement.
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