3.8 Article

Loss to long-term follow-up in children with spinal tuberculosis: a retrospective cohort study at a tertiary hospital in the Western Cape, South Africa

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PAN AFRICAN MEDICAL JOURNAL
卷 41, 期 -, 页码 -

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AFRICAN FIELD EPIDEMIOLOGY NETWORK-AFENET
DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2022.41.241.31928

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Tuberculosis; spinal; child; kyphosis; follow-up studies

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Most children with spinal tuberculosis do not receive recommended follow-up until skeletal maturity. Further studies are needed to investigate the sequelae during skeletal maturation in the context of current management for pediatric spinal tuberculosis.
Introduction: children with spinal tuberculosis (TB) are at risk of kyphotic deformity both during and after the active phase of the disease. Management guidelines include follow-up until skeletal maturity. Little is known about adherence to this recommendation. This study aimed to investigate loss to long-term spine clinic follow-up (LTFU) among children with spinal TB at a tertiary hospital in the Western Cape Province, South Africa. Methods: this retrospective cohort study included all children diagnosed with spinal TB at Tygerberg Hospital between January 2012 and December 2015. Spine clinic follow-up was investigated for five years following diagnosis. Relevant surgical interventions and re-presentation were evaluated until 31 st December 2020. Results: thirty-two children, median age 6 years (range 1-14 years), were diagnosed with spinal TB and intended for spine clinic follow-up. Twenty-seven (84%) children were LTFU within five years of diagnosis with 16 (50%) LTFU within 10.5 months. Among children in follow-up, one child had further surgery for progression of deformity two years from diagnosis and one child had further surgery for new-onset neurological deficit eight years from diagnosis. Conclusion: most children with spinal TB did not receive the recommended follow-up until skeletal maturity. Without further data on these children, the clinical significance of this LTFU could not be evaluated. Further studies are needed to investigate sequelae during skeletal maturation in the context of current management for paediatric spinal TB.

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