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- Eduardo M Suero, Renate Meindl, Thomas A Schildhauer, and Mustafa Citak.
- Division of Spinal Cord Injury, BG-University Hospital Bergmannsheil, Bochum, Germany.
- Spine. 2018 Nov 15; 43 (22): 1572-1578.
Study DesignA case-control study; clinical prediction rule.ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to construct and internally validate a clinical prediction rule to identify patients at high risk of developing heterotopic ossification (HO) after spinal cord injury (SCI).Summary Of Background DataHO after SCI can lead to loss of joint mobility, loss of function, peripheral nerve entrapment, and pressure sores. HO is usually diagnosed on the basis of clinical symptoms, as no laboratory tests are yet available to identify patients with early HO formation. Risk factors include a complete SCI; patient age; spasticity; urinary tract infection (UTI); pneumonia; pelvic trauma; cervical or thoracic injury; and pressure sores.MethodsWe analyzed a total of 558 patients with SCI, of whom 221 developed HO of the hip. A parametric survival model was fitted to estimate the probability of developing HO of the hip within 3 months of a SCI. Hazard ratios (HRs) calculation, internal validation, calibration, and model reduction were performed over 200 bootstrapped resamples. A risk score for clinical used was developed.ResultsRisk factors contributing to the risk score were completeness of the injury, age, sex, UTI, spasticity, and pneumonia. The model demonstrated good discrimination (AUC = 0.72). According to the risk score quintiles, the risk of developing HO after SCI was 1.0 for persons with a score of 0 to 17 and increased 2.47-fold for persons with a score of 1 to 21, 4.75-fold for persons with a score of 22 to 27, 6.95-fold for persons with a score of 28 to 31, and 9.23-fold for persons with a score of 32-35.ConclusionThe risk score demonstrated good discrimination in predicting the occurrence of HO within 3 months of a SCI. Further development and validation of the model in other populations is warranted.Level Of Evidence3.
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