Spinal tuberculosis in children: Retrospective analysis of 124 patients

Indian J Orthop. 2012 Mar;46(2):150-8. doi: 10.4103/0019-5413.93676.

Abstract

Background: There is a paucity of report on spinal tuberculosis in children. We report a retrospective analysis of 124 children with TB spine treated over 30 years.

Materials and methods: We retrospectively reviewed 124 children; of cervical (n=36), cervicothoracic (n=4), thoracic (n=53), and lumbar and lumbosacral tuberculosis (n=31) with no skip or multifocal lesions treated between 1971-2004. The age ranged from 2 to 15 years of age with 28 children less than 5 years of age, 58 were between 6 and 10 years, and 38 were over 10 years, 18 had paraplegia of various degrees. Ninety-one children were treated conservatively, while 33 children were subjected to surgery for focal debridement (n=23), posterior interspinous wiring and cementation (n=4), and posterior instrumentation with rods and segmental wiring (n=14). Triple chemotherapy (isoniazid, streptomycin, and PAS) was given for 18 months (3HSPa, 15Hpa) between 1971 and 1975, and triple or quadruple chemotherapy (isoniazid, rifampicin, ethambutol, or pyrazinamide) after 1976 to 2004 for 12 months (12RHZ or 12 RHZE). Some of the children in the current series belonged to the British MRC conservative study patients. The average duration of followup was 5 years and 8 months (range 1.6-20 years).

Results: All children attained healed status and showed neural recovery (n=18). The patients attained healed status at 18 months in the first series and at 12 months in the second series after chemotherapy. Spontaneous intercorporal fusion occurred only in 10 (8.06%) of 124 children. Sagittal curve during growth showed three different patterns: Unchanged, decreased, and increased curves. The residual kyphosis was unavoidable in cases with growth plate damage. Kyphosis increased in cases with wedged monovertebra and fused wedged block vertebra, though it was different at different level.

Conclusion: The vertebral reformation and curve correction were possible only through the growth plates. The posterior instrumented stabilization alone could correct and/or prevent progress of the kyphosis. However, for active tuberculosis, posterior instrumented stabilization combined with anterior radical surgery should be reserved only for the advanced tuberculosis with instability, rapid progress of kyphosis, and/or unacceptable pre-existing kyphosis, though there is a new trend of prophylactic posterior instrumentation even for the early tuberculosis.

Keywords: Tuberculosis; children; instrumented stabilization; kyphosis; spine.