ISSLS PRIZE in Clinical Science 2022: Epidemiology, risk factors and clinical impact of juvenile Modic changes in paediatric patients with low back pain
Purpose It’s a long-held belief that Modic changes (MC) occur only in adults, with advanced age, and are highly associated with pain and adverse outcomes. The following study addressed the epidemiology, risk factors and clinical relevance of MC in young paediatric patients. Methods Two hundred and s...
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Veröffentlicht in: | European spine journal 2022-05, Vol.31 (5), p.1069-1079 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Purpose
It’s a long-held belief that Modic changes (MC) occur only in adults, with advanced age, and are highly associated with pain and adverse outcomes. The following study addressed the epidemiology, risk factors and clinical relevance of MC in young paediatric patients.
Methods
Two hundred and seven consecutive patients with no history of deformities, neoplasms, trauma, or infections were included in this ambispective study. MRIs were utilized to assess MCs and types, and other degenerative disc/endplate abnormalities. Subject demographics, duration of symptoms, clinic visits, conservative management (physical therapy, NSAIDs, opioids, injections) and surgery were noted.
Results
The mean age was 16.5 years old (46.9% males), 14% had MCs and they occurred throughout the spine. Subject baseline demographics were similar between MCs and non-MCs patients (
p >
0.05). Modic type 2 (50%) was the most common type (type 1:27.1%; type 3:18.8%; mixed:4.7%). Multivariate analyses noted that endplate damage (OR: 11.36), disc degeneration (OR: 5.81), disc space narrowing (OR: 5.77), Schmorl’s nodes (OR: 4.30) and spondylolisthesis (OR: 3.55) to be significantly associated with MCs (
p
0.05). Among surgery patients (n = 44), 21% also had MCs (
p =
0.134). Symptom-duration was significantly greater in MC patients (
p =
0.049).
Conclusion
Contrary to traditional dogma, robust evidence now exists noting that MCs and their types can develop in children. Our findings give credence to the “Juvenile” variant of MCs, whereby its implications throughout the lifespan need to be assessed. Juvenile MCs have prolonged symptoms and related to specific structural spine phenotypes. |
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ISSN: | 0940-6719 1432-0932 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00586-022-07125-x |