Study | Study Design | Level of Evidence | Patients, n | Patient Population | Mean Age, y | Mean Follow-Up, mo | Tether | Clinical Outcome |
Alluriu et al27 | Retrospective cohort | III | 83 | ASD patients | 64 | 20.3 | Semitendinous allograft | PJK present in 33% (16/49) of patients in tether group and 32% (11/34) of patients in control group (P = 0.31); PJF occurred in 18% (6/34) in control group but did not occur in tether group (P = 0.01) |
Buell et al28 | Retrospective cohort | III | 120 | ASD patients with instrumentation at >6 motion segments without transitional rods or hooks at UIV; all had lower-thoracic UIV (T9-T11) | 67 | 28 | Mersilene polyethylene tape | Tethers significantly reduced PJK in ASD patients with lower-thoracic UIV (OR = 0.063, 95% CI = 0.016–0.247, P < 0.001); risk factors for PJK in patients with tether were greater postoperative lordosis of upper lumbar spine and greater UIV angle |
Buell et al29 | Retrospective cohort | III | 184 | ASD patients with instrumentation at >6 motion segments without transitional rods, hooks at UIV, or vertebral augmentation | 66 | 20 | Mersilene polyethylene tape | PJK rates: 45.3% (29/64) in no-tether group; 34.4% (22/64) in tether-only group; and 17.9% (10/56) in tether with crosslink group; PJK rate was lower for all tethered (26.7%) vs no-tether groups (P = 0.011) |
Iyer et al30 | Retrospective cohort | III | 108 | ASD patients with >5-level fusion to the pelvis | 55 | 17.6 | Mersilene polyethylene tape | Rates of PJK in tether group (27.3%) and no-tether group (28.6%) were similar (P = 0.827); tether was not protective against PJK |
Line et al31 | Prospective cohort | II | 625 | ASD patients with >5 levels fused posteriorly | 58.6 | 31 | Polyethylene tether assessed in the context of other PJK preventive approaches (cement, hook, and avoidance of overcorrection) | If no PJF prophylaxis used and sagittal plane overcorrected, PJF rate was 24.2%; if PJF prophylaxis used, PJF rate was significantly lower (10.6%, P < 0.05) and further reduced to 9.9% if also not overcorrected; PJF rate similar (P > 0.05) for cement (12.1%), hooks (7.0%), and tether (16.1%) |
Pham et al32 | Retrospective case series | IV | 4 | ASD patients with long-segment spinal fusion to the upper-thoracic spine | 60 | 5.5 | Semitendinous allograft | None of the 4 patients developed PJK at 5.5 mo follow-up; mean PJA increased by 3° |
Rabinovich et al33 | Retrospective cohort | III | 184 | ASD patients with >5 level fusions to the pelvis | 67 | 45.4 | Mersilene polyethylene tape | PJK rates: 60.7% (37/61) in no-tether group; 35.7% (15/42) in tether-only group; and 23.3% (10/43) in tether with crosslink group; rate of PJK in no-tether group was significantly higher than in tether group (60.7% vs 29.4%, P < 0.001); PJK rate was lower in tether with crosslink vs no-tether group (P = 0.016); |
Rabinovich et al34 | Retrospective case series | IV | 71 | ASD patients with long-segment spinal fusion | 66 | 14 | Polyethylene-terephthalate tape | PJK occurred in 15%; PJA increased by mean of 4°; rates of symptomatic PJK and revision for PJK were 8.8% and 2.9%, respectively |
Rodnoi et al35 | Retrospective cohort | III | 43 | ASD patients with fusion from throacolumbar junction (T9–L1) to the pelvis | 69 | 24 | Mersilene polyethylene tape | Rate of PJK was significantly higher in no-tether group (17/20; 85%) vs tether group (10/23; 43.5%; P = 0.01); rate of PJF was significantly lower in tether group (0/23, 0%) vs no-tether group (7/20, 35%; P = 0.003) |
Rodriguez-Fontan et al36 | Retrospective cohort | III | 80 | ASD patients with >3 levels fused posteriorly | 62.3 | 24 | Mersilene polyethylene tape | PJK rate at 2-y follow-up was 15% in tether group and 38% in no-tether group (OR = 0.28, P = 0.04); higher latent period to PJK for tether vs no-tether group (20 vs 7.5 mo, P = 0.018); tether reduced PJK risk after adjusting for confounders (age >55 y, 7–15 levels fused, thoracic UIV, BMI >27, osteoporosis) |
Safaee et al37 | Retrospective cohort | III | 200 | ASD patients undergoing instrumented fusion | 64 | Minimum 6 | Soft sublaminar cable | Mean change in PJA was 6° in tether group vs 14° in no-tether group (P < 0.001); PJF rate in tether group was 4% (4/100) vs 18% (18/100) in no-tether group (P = 0.002) |
Safaee et al38 | Retrospective cohort | III | 319 | ASD patients undergoing instrumented fusion | 65 | Minimum 12 | Soft sublaminar cable | Rate of reoperation for PJF significantly lower in tether group (8/242, 3.3%) vs no-tether group (12/77, 15.6%; P < 0.001); for patients with upper-throacic UIV, rate of PJF was 0% in tether group vs 6.7% in no-tether group (P = 0.014); for patients with lower-thoracic UIV, rate decreased from 21.3% to 5.3% (P = 0.001); on multivariate analysis, only use of tether and greater number of fused levels were associated with reductions in the rate of reoperation for PJF |
Viswanathan et al39 | Prospective cohort | II | 40 | ASD patients undergoing thoracic to ilium instrumentation | 64 | 12 (median) | Braided sublaminar band | PJK developed in 3 of 40 (7.5%) patients; no instances of PJF; 3 procedure-related complications (2 CSF leaks and 1 transient neurological deficit) |
Yagi et al40 | Retrospective cohort | III | 64 | ASD patients undergoing instrumented fusion from lower throacic spine to sacrum | 67 | Minimum 24 | Sublaminar polyethylene band | PJA was significantly greater in the no-tether group (17° vs 8°, P < 0.001); incidence of PJF was lower in the tether group (3% vs 25%, P = 0.03), with an OR of 0.1 (95% CI: 0.0–0.8, P = 0.03) |
Zaghloul et al41 | Retrospective case series | IV | 23 | ASD patients treated with long-segment posterior instrumented fusion | 63 | 11.9 | Mersilene polyethylene tape | None of the patients had developed PJK (0%) as of last follow-up |
Abbreviations: ASD, adult spinal deformity; BMI, body mass index; CI, confidence interval; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; OR, odds ratio; PJA, proximal junctional angle; PJF, proximal junctional failure; PJK, proximal junctional kyphosis; UIV, upper-most instrumented vertebra.