Journal article
Association Between BMI Z-Score and Postoperative Complications in Pediatric Neuromuscular Scoliosis Surgery
Global spine journal
03/08/2026
DOI: 10.1177/21925682261430676
PMID: 41796316
Abstract
Study DesignSingle-center retrospective review.ObjectiveTo investigate the association between BMI Z-scores and postoperative complications in pediatric patients with neuromuscular scoliosis undergoing spinal instrumentation.MethodsPediatric patients who underwent spinal instrumentation for neuromuscular scoliosis from July 2012 to June 2016 with a minimum 2-year follow-up were included. BMI and BMI Z-scores were calculated, and patients were stratified into CDC-defined BMI-for-age percentiles: underweight (<5th percentile), normal (5th to <85th percentile), overweight (85th to <95th percentile), and obese (≥95th percentile). Logistic regression assessed associations of BMI, BMI Z-score, and BMI groups with postoperative complications.ResultsIn total, 147 patients were included. Average follow-up was 3.2 ± 1.4 years. The most common diagnosis was cerebral palsy (39.5%). Complications occurred in 65 (44.2%) patients: 32 (21.8%) had a surgical site infection (SSI), 10 (6.8%) developed pneumonia, and 24 (16.3%) required return to the operating room within 90 days. Higher BMI Z-score was associated with increased odds of deep SSI (OR = 1.50,
= 0.039), 30-day readmission (OR = 1.45,
= 0.045), and reoperation within 90 days (OR = 1.52,
= 0.026), and decreased odds of pneumonia (OR = 0.77,
= 0.041). Similar associations were seen for BMI.ConclusionHigher BMI Z-scores were associated with increased odds of deep SSI, readmission within 30 days, and return to the operating room within 90 days. Lower BMI Z-scores were associated with increased risk of developing pneumonia; however, this should be interpreted with caution as these patients had baseline pulmonary comorbidities. BMI Z-scores may be a useful adjunct for preoperative risk stratification in pediatric neuromuscular scoliosis patients undergoing spinal instrumentation.Level of EvidencePrognostic Level III.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Association Between BMI Z-Score and Postoperative Complications in Pediatric Neuromuscular Scoliosis Surgery
- Creators
- Alexander K Mihas - Baylor College of MedicineDion Birhiray - Baylor College of MedicineChun Wai Hung - Baylor College of MedicineLorenzo R Deveza - Baylor College of MedicineDallas Vanorny - Baylor College of MedicineFrank Gerow - Texas Children's HospitalDarrell Hanson - Texas Children's HospitalBenny Dahl - University of Copenhagen
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- Global spine journal
- DOI
- 10.1177/21925682261430676
- PMID
- 41796316
- NLM abbreviation
- Global Spine J
- ISSN
- 2192-5682
- eISSN
- 2192-5690
- Publisher
- Sage
- Grant note
- Elsass FoundationAlfred Benzon Foundation
The authors wish to thank the Texas Children's Spine Study Group. Benny Dahl is supported by the Elsass Foundation and the Alfred Benzon Foundation.
- Language
- English
- Electronic publication date
- 03/08/2026
- Academic Unit
- Orthopedics and Rehabilitation
- Record Identifier
- 9985143554602771
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