What Radiographic and Spinopelvic Parameters do Spine Surgeons Consider in Decision-Making for Treatment of Degenerative Lumbar Spondylolisthesis?

Cabrera Cousiño, Juan P. and Virk, Michael S and Cho, Samuel K and Muthu, Sathish and Ambrosio, Luca and Yoon, Shin Won and Buser, Zorica and Wang, Jeffrey C. and Diwan, Ashish and Hsieh, Patrick C What Radiographic and Spinopelvic Parameters do Spine Surgeons Consider in Decision-Making for Treatment of Degenerative Lumbar Spondylolisthesis? Global Spine Journal. pp. 1-7. ISSN 2192-5682

[thumbnail of SpinoPelvicParameters.pdf] Text
SpinoPelvicParameters.pdf - Published Version

Download (661kB)

Abstract

Study Design Cross-sectional survey. Objective Surgical treatment of degenerative lumbar spondylolisthesis is remarkably varied due to heterogeneity of clinical-radiological presentations. This study aimed to assess which spinopelvic radiological parameters were considered for decision-making. Methods Survey distributed to International AO Spine members to analyze surgeons’ considerations for treatment. Data collected includes demographics, training background, years of experience, and treatment decisions based on various radiographical findings, including segmental and global spinopelvic parameters. Results From 479 responses, the most frequently radiological parameter considered was slippage on dynamic X-rays (79.1%), followed by disc height (78.9%), global sagittal balance SVA (71.4%), and PI-LL mismatch (69.7%), while the least important was absolute spondylolisthesis on static lateral radiograph (22.8%). Fellowship-trained surgeons were likelier to use SVA (OR = 1.73, 95% CI = 1.02-2.99, P = 0.049), and disc height (2.13, 1.14-3.98, P < 0.05). There was no difference between orthopedics and neurosurgery in applying SVA and PI-LL mismatch. Surgeons from Asia Pacific emphasizes segmental lordosis (2.39, 1.11-5.15, P = 0.026) as from Latin America (2.55, 1.09-5.95, P = 0.030) and Middle East (4.33, 1.66-11.28, P = 0.003). However, surgeons from Latin America and Middle East also significant consider disc height (2.95, 1.07-8.15, P = 0.037) and (3.03, 1.04-8.83, P = 0.043), respectively. Additionally, the surgeons’ age was associated with using angular motion on flexion-extension radiographs, and volume of treated cases yearly with consideration for disc height. Conclusions Treatment of degenerative lumbar spondylolisthesis was influenced by slippage on dynamic radiographs, disc height, global alignment, and PI-LL mismatch. Surgeons’ age and Region, fellowship-trained, and volume of treated cases were significantly associated to apply these radiological parameters.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Research Methods
Spine Surgery
Imaging
Divisions: Orthopaedic Surgery
Depositing User: Mr Repository Admin
Date Deposited: 01 Jan 2026 11:29
Last Modified: 01 Jan 2026 11:29
URI: https://ir.orthopaedicresearchgroup.com/id/eprint/383

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item