Joseph Karan, Bui Tim T, Yahanda Alexander T, Gupta Vivek P, Vogl Samuel, Yakdan Salim, Galla Jeffrey T, Ruiz-Cardozo Miguel A, Barot Karma, Chakladar Sundeep, Poulin Noah D, Challagundla Anurag, Ng Jason, Krishnan Anitra, Brehm Samuel N, Benedict Braeden, Clohisy John C, Pallotta Nicholas, Gupta Munish C, Neuman Brian J, Hills Jeffrey, Kelly Michael P, Hafez Daniel, Greenberg Jacob K, Ray Wilson Z, Molina Camilo A
Department of Neurosurgery, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2025 Jul 11. doi: 10.1097/BRS.0000000000005450.
Retrospective cohort study.
To evaluate the predictive value of T4-L1 Hip Axis Error (HAE) and L1PA Error (L1PAE) on mechanical failure following adult spinal deformity (ASD) surgery, and to assess how error directionality and fusion length influence outcomes.
The T4-L1 Hip Axis is a novel framework for defining normative sagittal alignment by aligning thoracic and lumbar curvatures relative to the pelvis. Prior studies suggest that deviation from this axis may contribute to mechanical complications following ASD surgery. However, the impact of directionality, construct length, and specific risk factors remains underexplored.
A retrospective review was conducted on 271 ASD patients who underwent fusion from L2 or above to the pelvis between 2016-2024. T4PA and L1PA were measured from six-week postoperative standing radiographs. Alignment errors (HAE, L1PAE) were calculated based on target threshold derived from prior normative studies. Multivariate logistic regression identified predictors of mechanical failures. Subgroup analyses were stratified by fusion length and error direction.
HAE was a significant predictor of mechanical failure (OR=1.20 per °, P<0.001), whereas L1PAE was not. HAE remained predictive regardless of whether patients achieved L1PA targets. In short fusions, both signed and absolute value of HAE were associated with mechanical failure. Positive HAE (anterior T4 alignment) conferred the highest risk. Higher BMI and short constructs were independent predictors of increased HAE.
HAE is a robust, direction-sensitive predictor of mechanical failure in ASD surgery. Its predictive power surpasses L1PAE and remains significant in both long and short segment fusions. HAE Should be routinely measured and minimized intraoperatively to reduce postoperative mechanical complications.