Fusion is the current standard of care for AIS. Anterior vertebral body tethering (AVBT) is a motion-sparing alternative gaining interest. As a novel procedure, there is a paucity of literature on ...safety. Here, we report 90-day complication rates in 184 patients who underwent AVBT by a single surgeon. Patients were retrospectively reviewed. Approaches included 71 thoracic, 45 thoracolumbar, 68 double. Major complications were those requiring readmittance or reoperation, prolonged use of invasive materials such as chest tubes, or resulted in spinal cord or nerve root injury. Minor complications resolved without invasive intervention. Mean operative time and blood loss were 186.5 ± 60.3 min and 167.2 ± 105.0 ml, respectively. No patient required allogenic blood transfusion. 6 patients experienced major (3.3%), and 6 had minor complications (3.3%). Major complications included 3 chylothoracies, 2 hemothoracies, and 1 lumbar radiculopathy secondary to screw placement requiring re-operation. Minor complications included 1 patient with respiratory distress requiring supplementary oxygen, 1 superficial wound infection, 2 cases of prolonged nausea, and 1 Raynaud phenomenon. In 184 patients who underwent AVBT for AIS, major and minor complication rates were both 3.3%.
Study Design
Retrospective Cohort Study
Objectives
Mid-term Anterior Vertebral Body Tethering (AVBT) results demonstrate an acceptable degree of clinical success, yet the revision rate remains ...notably higher than fusion. Fulcrum-bending radiographs have previously been shown to more reliably predict radiological outcomes in Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis (AIS) as compared to supine-lateral bending radiographs. This study aims to discern how Fulcrum Flexibility Rate (FFR) correlates with Correction Rate (CR) and establish whether this can reliably predict residual deformity following AVBT surgery.
Methods
A review of 38 consecutive AIS patients undergoing thoracic AVBT between 2015 – 2020 was performed. Preoperative (standing and fulcrum-bending) and postoperative (first-erect) radiographs were evaluated for curve magnitude using the Cobb-method. The FFR, CR and Fulcrum Bending Correction Index (FBCI) were calculated. Patients were also percentile-ranked according to their FFR and dichotomized into flexible and rigid cohorts for comparison. Student t-test, Pearson correlation and linear stepwise regression was applied.
Results:
AVBT resulted in a significant improvement in the major Cobb angle (Preoperative: 50.9±7.5° vs Postoperative: 19.9±9.4°; P < .0001) with a mean FBCI of 98.0%. Bivariate correlation revealed a moderate relationship between fulcrum-bending and first-erect Cobb angle (r = .5306, P = .0006). Linear regression demonstrated a predictive relationship between fulcrum-bending and first-erect Cobb using the equation ‘Postoperative Cobb = 7.5 + .65(Fulcrum-bending Cobb).’
Conclusion:
This is the first study to demonstrate the ability of fulcrum-bending radiographs to predict early radiographic outcomes following AVBT, ‘timepoint-zero’ for the growth modulation process.
Vertebral Body Tethering (VBT) is a non-fusion surgical treatment for Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis (AIS) that elicits correction via growth modulation in skeletally immature patients. VBT after ...peak height velocity is controversial and is the subject of this study. A retrospective review of Risser 3−5 AIS patients treated with VBT, and min. 2-year FU was performed. Pre to post-op changes in clinical outcomes were compared using Student’s t-test or the Mann-Whitney test. A total of 49 patients met criteria, age 15.0 ± 1.9 years, FU 32.5 ± 9.1 months. For thoracic (T) major curvatures, T curvature improved from 51.1 ± 6.9° to 27.2° ± 8.1° (p < 0.01) and TL from 37.2° ± 10.7° to 19.2° ± 6.8° (p < 0.01). For thoracolumbar (TL) major curvatures, T improved from 37.2° ± 10.7° to 18.8° ± 9.4° (p < 0.01) and TL from 49.0° ± 6.4° to 20.1° ± 8.5° (p < 0.01). Major curve inclinometer measurements and SRS-22 domains, except activity, improved significantly (p ≤ 0.05). At the latest FU, one (2%) patient required fusion of the T curve and revision of the TL tether due to curve progression in the previously uninstrumented T curve and tether breakage (TB) in the TL. Twenty (41%) patients experienced TB. VBT in AIS patients with limited remaining skeletal growth resulted in satisfactory clinical outcomes at the latest FU.
Some persons who have recovered from Covid-19 have antibodies to the spike protein of SARS-CoV-2. In 43 such persons who had received a first mRNA vaccine dose, high levels of neutralizing antispike ...antibodies were produced — in many cases even higher than after a second dose in 67 persons without baseline antibodies to the virus. Systemic reactions were more common in those seropositive before vaccination.
In this study we profiled vaccine-induced polyclonal antibodies as well as plasmablast-derived mAbs from individuals who received SARS-CoV-2 spike mRNA vaccine. Polyclonal antibody responses in ...vaccinees were robust and comparable to or exceeded those seen after natural infection. However, the ratio of binding to neutralizing antibodies after vaccination was greater than that after natural infection and, at the monoclonal level, we found that the majority of vaccine-induced antibodies did not have neutralizing activity. We also found a co-dominance of mAbs targeting the NTD and RBD of SARS-CoV-2 spike and an original antigenic-sin like backboost to spikes of seasonal human coronaviruses OC43 and HKU1. Neutralizing activity of NTD mAbs but not RBD mAbs against a clinical viral isolate carrying E484K as well as extensive changes in the NTD was abolished, suggesting that a proportion of vaccine-induced RBD binding antibodies may provide substantial protection against viral variants carrying single E484K RBD mutations.
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•Antibody responses after SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccination target RBD, NTD, and S2•SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccination induces a high rate of non-neutralizing antibodies•Crossreactive antibodies to seasonal β-coronaviruses are induced by vaccination•Variant mutation N501Y enhances affinity to human ACE2 while E484K reduces it
An analysis of mRNA vaccine-induced polyclonal antibodies and plasmablast-derived monoclonal antibodies from individuals vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2 identifies a high proportion of non-neutralizing antibodies and the induction of cross-reactive antibodies to seasonal coronaviruses and also maps the regions in the spike protein that are targeted, even among viral variants.
Vertebral body tethering is a nonfusion technique for the surgical correction of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. For skeletally immature patients for whom vertebral body tethering is indicated, it ...is an alternative option to the gold standard posterior spinal fusion (PSF) and may at least partially preserve motion in instrumented segments of the spine. Benefits of the procedure include the possibility of avoiding the long-term sequelae of PSF such as adjacent segment disease and proximal junctional kyphosis. Recent retrospective case series of vertebral body tethering have shown promising results with correction rates up to 70% but greater variability in outcomes compared with PSF. The complication profile of the procedure also appears to differ from PSF with tether breakage and overcorrection as primary concerns in addition to approach-related complications. Although early outcomes have been promising, additional studies to optimize surgical timing, long-term outcomes, and the possible role of tethering in the more skeletally mature patient are required.
Anterior vertebral body tethering (AVBT) has been approved for skeletally immature (IM) adolescent idiopathic scoliosis patients, but the role of AVBT in patients with minimal remaining skeletal ...growth is controversial. The purpose of this study was to compare minimum 2-year (YR2) outcomes in skeletally IM patients vs those with minimal remaining skeletal growth.
Patients with single thoracic AVBT were grouped by their preoperative (PR) skeletal maturity: IM (
= 16, Risser 0-2) vs mature (M,
= 19, Risser 3-5). Outcomes were assessed at PR, first erect (FE), and YR2. Median (range) was compared with nonparametric tests (
< 0.05).
The PR age was 12.5 (9-16) vs 15 (12-18) years with major Cobb 51° (36°-69°) and 49° (40°-69°) for IM and M, respectively. At FE, there was no difference in correction; however, at YR2, the IM group yielded a lower residual curve (15° -16° to 38° vs 29° 12°-42°,
= 0.008). Thoracolumbar/lumbar curves were corrected without group differences. Clinically successful correction (<35°) (15 94% vs 15 79%) and suspected cord breakages (2 13% vs 2 12%) were similar at YR2. Two overcorrections occurred, both in IM patients. Scoliosis Research Society-22 outcomes at final follow-up were similar between groups. No revision reoperations or conversions to spinal fusion were needed.
Skeletally IM patients benefit from greater growth-modulated curve correction than M patients, however, at the increased risk of overcorrection. M patients maintained clinically significant correction at latest follow-up. Longer-term follow-up is required to determine durability of outcomes for patients undergoing AVBT who have minimal remaining growth at the time of index surgery.
This study is relevant to spine surgeons, spine physiotherapists, and patients with idiopathic scoliosis. It offers evidence of clinical correction of scoliosis in mature patients.
Due to differences in human and murine angiotensin converting enzyme 2 (ACE-2) receptor, initially available SARS-CoV-2 isolates could not infect mice. Here we show that serial passaging of ...USA-WA1/2020 strain in mouse lungs results in "mouse-adapted" SARS-CoV-2 (MA-SARS-CoV-2) with mutations in S, M, and N genes, and a twelve-nucleotide insertion in the S gene. MA-SARS-CoV-2 infection causes mild disease, with more pronounced morbidity depending on genetic background and in aged and obese mice. Two mutations in the S gene associated with mouse adaptation (N501Y, H655Y) are present in SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern (VoCs). N501Y in the receptor binding domain of viruses of the B.1.1.7, B.1.351, P.1 and B.1.1.529 lineages (Alpha, Beta, Gamma and Omicron variants) is associated with high transmissibility and allows VoCs to infect wild type mice. We further show that S protein mutations of MA-SARS-CoV-2 do not affect neutralization efficiency by human convalescent and post vaccination sera.