4.3 Article

Risk Prediction of New Adjacent Vertebral Fractures After PVP for Patients with Vertebral Compression Fractures: Development of a Prediction Model

Journal

CARDIOVASCULAR AND INTERVENTIONAL RADIOLOGY
Volume 40, Issue 2, Pages 277-284

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00270-016-1492-1

Keywords

Osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures; Percutaneous vertebroplasty; New vertebral fracture; Adjacent; Risk prediction; Validation

Funding

  1. National Basic Research Program of China (973 Program) [2013CB733800, 2013733803]
  2. National High-tech Research Foundation of China (863 project) [2012AA022701]
  3. National Scientific and Technical Achievement Translation Foundation [[2012]258]
  4. Jiangsu Provincial Special Program of Medical Science [BL2013029]
  5. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81230034, 81171434]

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We aim to determine the predictors of new adjacent vertebral fractures (AVCFs) after percutaneous vertebroplasty (PVP) in patients with osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures (OVCFs) and to construct a risk prediction score to estimate a 2-year new AVCF risk-by-risk factor condition. Patients with OVCFs who underwent their first PVP between December 2006 and December 2013 at Hospital A (training cohort) and Hospital B (validation cohort) were included in this study. In training cohort, we assessed the independent risk predictors and developed the probability of new adjacent OVCFs (PNAV) score system using the Cox proportional hazard regression analysis. The accuracy of this system was then validated in both training and validation cohorts by concordance (c) statistic. 421 patients (training cohort: n = 256; validation cohort: n = 165) were included in this study. In training cohort, new AVCFs after the first PVP treatment occurred in 33 (12.9%) patients. The independent risk factors were intradiscal cement leakage and preexisting old vertebral compression fracture(s). The estimated 2-year absolute risk of new AVCFs ranged from less than 4% in patients with neither independent risk factors to more than 45% in individuals with both factors. The PNAV score is an objective and easy approach to predict the risk of new AVCFs.

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