1.Influencing factors of work-related musculoskeletal disorders in neck, shoulder, and lumbar regions among workers wearing insulated gloves in power grid industry
Xuyang LIAO ; Zekai LIANG ; Qingsong CHEN ; Chunguang DING ; Runkun ZHANG ; Guanlin LI
Journal of Environmental and Occupational Medicine 2026;43(5):591-596
Background As one of the primary operational methods in the power grid industry, the insulated glove working method imposes significant physical demands due to the constraints of insulating equipment and specific required postures, resulting in substantial occupational health hazards among workers in this sector, which have garnered widespread social attention. Objective To investigate the prevalence and influencing factors of work-related musculoskeletal disorders (WMSDs) in the neck, shoulder, and lumbar regions among workers wearing insulated gloves, and to provide targeted measures to reduce occupational hazards. Methods Using stratified cluster sampling, 1079 frontline workers were randomly selected from power supply enterprises across 3 provinces in China. The revised Chinese version of the Musculoskeletal Disorders Questionnaire was used to investigate the 1-year prevalence of WMSDs in the neck, shoulder, and lumbar regions among workers wearing insulated gloves, and to collect factors associated with multi-site WMSDs (defined as involvement of ≥2 sites among the neck, shoulder, and lumbar). Results The 1-year prevalence of WMSDs in the neck, shoulder, and lumbar regions was 39.9%, 30.0%, and 25.3%, respectively, with a multi-site WMSDs prevalence of 32.0%. Multiple logistic regression analysis showed that, compared to workers with technical secondary school education or senior high school education and below, workers with junior college education or bachelor’s degrees and above had a higher risk of multi-site WMSDs (OR=2.12, 95%CI: 1.47, 3.06). Compared to workers with <10 years of work experience, those with 10-<20 years of work experience had a higher risk of multi-site WMSDs (OR=1.96, 95%CI: 1.45, 2.67). Working in uncomfortable postures "sometimes" (OR=1.64, 95%CI: 1.14, 2.36), "frequently" (OR=2.75, 95%CI: 1.76, 4.29), and "very frequently" (OR=3.55, 95%CI: 2.04, 6.19) were significantly associated with an increased risk of multi-site WMSDs compared to never working in such postures. Frequent repetitive movements of the low back (OR=2.05, 95%CI: 1.48, 2.84) increased the risk of multi-site WMSDs, while sufficient rest time decreased the risk (OR=0.45, 95%CI: 0.34, 0.61). Conclusion The prevalences of single-site and multi-site WMSDs in the neck, shoulder, lumbar regions are relatively high among workers wearing insulated gloves. Factors associated with multi-site WMSDs include 10-<20 years of work experience, junior college education or bachelor’s degrees and above, uncomfortable working postures, frequent repetitive low-back movements, and lack of sufficient rest time.
2.Influencing factors of work-related musculoskeletal disorders in neck, shoulder, and lumbar regions among workers wearing insulated gloves in power grid industry
Xuyang LIAO ; Zekai LIANG ; Qingsong CHEN ; Chunguang DING ; Runkun ZHANG ; Guanlin LI
Journal of Environmental and Occupational Medicine 2026;43(5):591-596
Background As one of the primary operational methods in the power grid industry, the insulated glove working method imposes significant physical demands due to the constraints of insulating equipment and specific required postures, resulting in substantial occupational health hazards among workers in this sector, which have garnered widespread social attention. Objective To investigate the prevalence and influencing factors of work-related musculoskeletal disorders (WMSDs) in the neck, shoulder, and lumbar regions among workers wearing insulated gloves, and to provide targeted measures to reduce occupational hazards. Methods Using stratified cluster sampling, 1079 frontline workers were randomly selected from power supply enterprises across 3 provinces in China. The revised Chinese version of the Musculoskeletal Disorders Questionnaire was used to investigate the 1-year prevalence of WMSDs in the neck, shoulder, and lumbar regions among workers wearing insulated gloves, and to collect factors associated with multi-site WMSDs (defined as involvement of ≥2 sites among the neck, shoulder, and lumbar). Results The 1-year prevalence of WMSDs in the neck, shoulder, and lumbar regions was 39.9%, 30.0%, and 25.3%, respectively, with a multi-site WMSDs prevalence of 32.0%. Multiple logistic regression analysis showed that, compared to workers with technical secondary school education or senior high school education and below, workers with junior college education or bachelor’s degrees and above had a higher risk of multi-site WMSDs (OR=2.12, 95%CI: 1.47, 3.06). Compared to workers with <10 years of work experience, those with 10-<20 years of work experience had a higher risk of multi-site WMSDs (OR=1.96, 95%CI: 1.45, 2.67). Working in uncomfortable postures "sometimes" (OR=1.64, 95%CI: 1.14, 2.36), "frequently" (OR=2.75, 95%CI: 1.76, 4.29), and "very frequently" (OR=3.55, 95%CI: 2.04, 6.19) were significantly associated with an increased risk of multi-site WMSDs compared to never working in such postures. Frequent repetitive movements of the low back (OR=2.05, 95%CI: 1.48, 2.84) increased the risk of multi-site WMSDs, while sufficient rest time decreased the risk (OR=0.45, 95%CI: 0.34, 0.61). Conclusion The prevalences of single-site and multi-site WMSDs in the neck, shoulder, lumbar regions are relatively high among workers wearing insulated gloves. Factors associated with multi-site WMSDs include 10-<20 years of work experience, junior college education or bachelor’s degrees and above, uncomfortable working postures, frequent repetitive low-back movements, and lack of sufficient rest time.
3.Clinical phenotype and genotype analysis of retinitis pigmentosa sine pigmento caused by BBS gene mutations
Zijie CHEN ; Yufei TAO ; Yun WANG ; Qinyu HUANG ; Mingmin YANG ; Xuyang LIU ; Ning FAN
Chinese Journal of Ocular Fundus Diseases 2025;41(3):178-185
Objective:To observe and analyze the pathogenic genes and clinical phenotype characteristics of retinitis pigmentosa sinepigmento(RPSP).Methods:A retrospective clinical study. Two patients (proband) and five family members from two RPSP families admitted to Xiamen Eye Center of Xiamen University in December 2022 and Shenzhen Eye Hospital in July 2023 were included in the study. Two families have no blood relationship and were both Han Chinese. Detailed ocular and systemic medical history and specialized examinations were performed for all members, including color fundus photography, fundus autofluorescence (FAF), and full field electroretinogram (ff-ERG) examination. The peripheral venous blood of all members was collected, and genomic DNA was extracted. Pathogenic genes and their loci were screened using whole exome high-throughput sequencing technology. Sanger sequencing was used to verify the pathogenic genes in the two pedigrees. The pathogenicity of candidate variants was evaluated according to the American Society for American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) classification criteria and guidelines for genetic variants.Results:The two probands were male, aged 9 and 7 years, respectively. The main complaint was poor binocular vision for 6 and 3 years and poor treatment effect of amblyopia. The proband (Ⅱ2) in family 1 had a pale red color on the optic disc, with leopard-like changes in the posterior pole and thinner retinal arteries. FAF showed mottled fluorescence attenuation outside the macular vascular arch. There was no significant waveform in both bright and dark visual responses of ff-ERG. He also had 6-toed deformity of both feet, renal cysts, and a slightly overweight body. The clinical diagnosis was non-pigmentary retinitis pigmentosa. The proband of family 2 (Ⅱ1) had poor binocular vision in a dark environment and had atrophy lesions on the nasal side of the optic disc and leopard print like changes in the fundus. FAF showed uneven enhancement in the fovea. ff-ERG showed severe abnormalities in dark and light response, with significant decrease and delay in b-wave amplitude and latency. He had no other systemic abnormalities. The clinical diagnosis was binocular RPSP. There were no abnormal ocular and systemic manifestations in the two family members. Gene sequencing revealed a homozygous mutation (c.534+1G>T) of BBS2 gene, which was inherited from the mother and father respectively. Based on clinical manifestations and genetic testing results, the final diagnosis was Bardet Biedl syndrome. The genetic sequencing results confirmed a novel compound heterozygous mutation (c.950T>G: p. Leu317Arg missense mutation and c.849+1G>C splicing mutation) of BBS7 gene. His father (Ⅰ1) and mother (Ⅰ2) carried M1 heterozygous variants. Combined with the clinical manifestations and genetic testing results, the final diagnosis was Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS). Family 2 proband (Ⅱ1) carried the BBS7 gene C.950T>G (p.Leu317Arg) (M2) missense variation and C.849 +1G>C (M3) splice site variation. His father (Ⅰ1) and mother (Ⅰ2) carried M3 shear site variation and M2 missense variation, respectively. The two families all fit the autosomal recessive inheritance pattern, and the genotype and clinical phenotype were coseparated. According to ACMG guidelines, M1, M2 and M3 were all identified as possible pathogenic variants. Conclusions:BBS2 gene M1 homozygous variation and BBS7 gene M2, M3 complex heterozygous variation are the possible pathogenic genes in family 1 and family 2, respectively. Two families are affected by BBS and RPSP, respectively.
4.Characteristics of eye trauma in children and adolescents in China (China Eye Trauma Study 2023)
Mengyu LIAO ; Han HAN ; Xuyang YAO ; Jiaying NAN ; Yongjie CHEN ; Hua YAN
Chinese Journal of Ocular Fundus Diseases 2025;41(4):262-270
Objective:To analyze the epidemiological characteristics and injury patterns of eye trauma in children and adolescents in China.Methods:A multicenter cross-sectional, retrospective, observational study. Based on the Chinese Eye Trauma Registry database, 189 patients (189 eyes) aged 0-18 years (13.4%, 189/1 412) of 1 412 patients (1 435 eyes) with eye trauma who were hospitalized from January to December 2023 were included in the study. Patients were recruited from 23 tertiary general hospitals or ophthalmology specialty hospitals located in 17 provincial-level administrative regions across six major geographical areas in China (North China, East China, South China, Central China, Northwest China, and Southwest China). The analysis focused on population characteristics, epidemiological features, injury patterns, and visual outcomes of children from different geographical regions and age groups. Among the 189 eyes, 95 eyes underwent secondary surgery. A total of 23 eyes were excluded due to non-cooperation during examination, no light perception, or only light perception. Ultimately, 72 eyes were included in the statistical analysis. Of these, 36 eyes had follow-up data and were used to observe postoperative visual outcomes.Results:Among 189 patients, 143 were males (75.7%, 143/189) and 46 were females (24.3%, 46/189). Age 8.73 (1-18) years old. The gender composition of all age groups was mainly male. The geographical distribution showed that East China had the largest number of cases, 55 (29.1%, 55/189). There were 70 cases (37.0%, 70/189) in 7-10 years old. The type analysis of eye trauma showed that in 189 eyes, mechanical ocular trauma accounted for 130 eyes, of which 105 (80.8%, 105/130) eyes had open globe injuries and 25 (19.2%, 25/130) eyes had closed globe injuries. 122 eyes received emergency surgery within 24 h after injury (accounts for 83.6% of emergency surgical cases, 122/146). In 36 eyes with complete follow-up data, the initial visual acuity distribution was: blind 23 eyes (63.9%), low visual acuity 6 eyes (16.7%), visual acuity ≥0.3 in 7 eyes (19.4%). At the last follow-up, visual acuity improved in 12 eyes (33.3%) with blindness, 8 eyes (22.2%) with low visual acuity, and 16 eyes (44.4%) with visual acuity ≥ 0.3. The final visual outcome showed that the disability rate was 22.2% (8/36) and the blindness rate was 33.3% (12/36).Conclusions:Children and adolescents account for 13.4% of the hospitalized patients with eye trauma in the same period, and there is a significant gender difference (male accounted for 75.7%). There are obvious age-specific distribution rules in the causes, locations and clinical features of eye trauma in children and adolescents of different ages.
5.Lateral fusion after oblique lateral lumbar interbody fusion: incidence, imaging characteristics, and contributing factors
Yongjun TONG ; Chudi FU ; Junhui LIU ; Bao HUANG ; Yilei CHEN ; Zhi SHAN ; Xuyang ZHANG ; Shunwu FAN ; Fengdong ZHAO
Chinese Journal of Orthopaedics 2025;45(7):420-428
Objective:To evaluate the characteristic manifestations of lumbar fusion following oblique lateral interbody fusion (OLIF), determine the specific incidence of these patterns, and the identify factors associated with fusion characteristics.Methods:This retrospective study analyzed 209 patients who underwent OLIF surgery at Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine, between July 2017 and September 2023. The cohort had a mean age of 64.2±9.8 years and included 125 males and 84 females. A total of 338 lumbar segments were assessed, comprising 159 segments treated with stand-alone OLIF (OLIF-SA) and 179 segments treated with OLIF combined with posterior pedicle screw fixation (OLIF-PSF). Inclusion criteria were: patients aged 18-80 years who underwent OLIF with complete radiographic records. Surgical parameters, including fixation method, number of fused segments, surgical approach, and cage dimensions (height and width), were obtained from operative records. Radiographic evaluation included preoperative osteophytes, Hounsfield unit (HU) values of endplates, and cage positioning. Fusion rate, fusion pattern (lateral vs. central), cage subsidence, and related influencing factors were assessed. Clinical outcomes were measured via the Oswestry disability index (ODI) and visual analog scale (VAS) preoperatively, immediately postoperatively, and at 1-year follow-up. Results:The overall fusion rate was 98.2% (332/338), with a non-union rate of 1.8% (6/338). The incidence of lateral fusion was 40.2% (136/338). In the OLIF-SA group, lateral and central fusion rates were 50.3% (80/159) and 49.7% (79/159), respectively, with no cases of non-union. In the OLIF-PSF group, lateral fusion occurred in 31.3% (56/179), central fusion in 65.4% (117/179), and non-union in 3.3% (6/179), with statistically significant differences between groups ( P<0.05). Preoperative osteophytes and higher endplate HU values were significantly associated with lateral fusion ( P<0.05). However, cage dimensions and cage position (anterior-posterior and lateral placement) were not significantly associated with fusion pattern ( P>0.05). Overall, 61.5% (208/338) of segments showed no cage subsidence; 24.5% (83/338) had settling, and 14.0% (47/338) had grade 1 or higher subsidence. Among lateral fusion cases, the rates of no subsidence, anchoring, grade 1, grade 2, and grade 3 subsidence were 67.6%, 21.3%, 7.4%, 3.9%, and 0.7%, respectively. In the central fusion group, these rates were 59.2%, 27.6%, 9.2%, 2.5%, and 1.3%, respectively. In the non-union group, grade 2 and 3 subsidence occurred in 50% (3/6) each, significantly higher than in the other fusion groups ( P<0.05). Post hoc analysis confirmed that grade 2 and 3 subsidence rates were significantly elevated in the non-union group compared to the lateral and central fusion groups, while other subsidence categories showed no significant differences across groups. Clinically, patients showed significant improvements in ODI and VAS scores following surgery ( P<0.05). Conclusions:Lateral fusion occurred in 40.2% of OLIF cases. The OLIF-SA technique, preoperative osteophytes, and elevated preoperative HU values were significantly associated with lateral fusion. In contrast, surgical approach, number of fused segments, cage height, width, and cage positioning did not significantly influence the occurrence of lateral fusion.
6.GSFM: A genome-scale functional module transformation to represent drug efficacy for in silico drug discovery.
Saisai TIAN ; Xuyang LIAO ; Wen CAO ; Xinyi WU ; Zexi CHEN ; Jinyuan LU ; Qun WANG ; Jinbo ZHANG ; Luonan CHEN ; Weidong ZHANG
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B 2025;15(1):133-150
Pharmacotranscriptomic profiles, which capture drug-induced changes in gene expression, offer vast potential for computational drug discovery and are widely used in modern medicine. However, current computational approaches neglected the associations within gene‒gene functional networks and unrevealed the systematic relationship between drug efficacy and the reversal effect. Here, we developed a new genome-scale functional module (GSFM) transformation framework to quantitatively evaluate drug efficacy for in silico drug discovery. GSFM employs four biologically interpretable quantifiers: GSFM_Up, GSFM_Down, GSFM_ssGSEA, and GSFM_TF to comprehensively evaluate the multi-dimension activities of each functional module (FM) at gene-level, pathway-level, and transcriptional regulatory network-level. Through a data transformation strategy, GSFM effectively converts noisy and potentially unreliable gene expression data into a more dependable FM active matrix, significantly outperforming other methods in terms of both robustness and accuracy. Besides, we found a positive correlation between RSGSFM and drug efficacy, suggesting that RSGSFM could serve as representative measure of drug efficacy. Furthermore, we identified WYE-354, perhexiline, and NTNCB as candidate therapeutic agents for the treatment of breast-invasive carcinoma, lung adenocarcinoma, and castration-resistant prostate cancer, respectively. The results from in vitro and in vivo experiments have validated that all identified compounds exhibit potent anti-tumor effects, providing proof-of-concept for our computational approach.
8.Association between bronchopulmonary dysplasia and regulatory T cell levels in the peripheral blood of preterm infants
Yazhou SUN ; Chen SONG ; Chenghe TANG ; Xuyang DAI ; Yan YAN ; Jiaqin WANG
Chinese Journal of Applied Clinical Pediatrics 2025;40(5):363-367
Objective:To investigate the association of regulatory T cell (Treg) levels in peripheral blood with bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) in preterm infants and its predictive value for BPD.Methods:In this case-control study, a total of 102 infants with gestational age ≤32 weeks who were hospitalized in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit of the First Affiliated Hospital of Xinxiang Medical University from April 2022 to April 2024 were included.They were divided into a BPD group (31 cases) and a non-BPD group (71 cases) based on the diagnostic criteria of BPD.Peripheral blood samples were collected on 0 day, 7 days, 14 days, 21 days and 28 days after birth.Differences in Treg levels between the 2 groups and the relationship between Treg levels and BPD were analyzed.The independent sample t test or χ2 test was used to analyze differences between the 2 groups.One-Way ANOVA was used to compare data between groups.Multivariate Logistic regression was used to analyze the risk factors of BPD.The receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve was used to evaluate the predictive value of Treg levels on 7 days after birth for early diagnosis of BPD. Results:Gestational age[(28.1±1.4) weeks vs.(30.9±1.0) weeks], birth weight[(1 024±243) g vs.(1 301±188) g], Apgar score at 1 minute after birth[(4.3±1.9) points vs.(7.8±1.9) points], Apgar score at 5 minutes after birth[(7.2±1.7) points vs.(9.1±1.3) points], proportion of invasive mechanical ventilation time ≥7 days [87.1%(27/31) vs.45.1%(32/71)] and oxygen inhalation time[(45.1±11.7) days vs.(19.7±7.3) days] were statistically significantly different between BPD and non-BPD groups (all P<0.05).The Treg level in the peripheral blood of preterm infants increased first and then decreased after birth, with the peak observed on 7 days after birth.On 7 days after birth, the BPD group had a significantly higher Treg level than the non-BPD group[(10.4±1.2)% vs.(8.7±1.7)%] ( P<0.05).The multivariate Logistic regression analysis showed increased Treg levels in peripheral blood on 7 days after birth ( OR=3.320, 95% CI: 1.057-10.427, P=0.040), gestational age ( OR=0.040, 95% CI: 0.003-0.446, P=0.009), invasive mechanical ventilation time ≥7 days ( OR=4.126, 95% CI: 1.301-14.125, P=0.002), and oxygen inhalation time ( OR=1.716, 95% CI: 1.317-3.933, P=0.041) were risk factors of BPD in preterm infants.The ROC curve analysis showed that the area under the curve of Treg levels on 7 days after birth for BPD prediction was 0.794, the best cut-off value was 9.35%, the sensitivity was 90.3%, and the specificity was 66.2%. Conclusions:Treg levels in the peripheral blood of preterm infants increase first and then decrease in the early stage after birth, peaking at 7 days after birth.Elevated Treg levels at 7 days after birth may have early predictive value for the occurrence of BPD in preterm infants.
9.Proximal pericolic lymph node metastasis beyond 10 cm in rectal cancer: patterns of prognostic impact of extended resection in a prospective cohort study
Xuyang YANG ; Yang ZHANG ; Lina YE ; Qingbin WU ; Tinghan YANG ; Mingtian WEI ; Xiangbing DENG ; Haining CHEN ; Wenjian MENG ; Ziqiang WANG
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2025;28(9):1015-1025
Objective:To determine the actual metastasis rate of paracolic lymph nodes (PCN) more than 10 cm proximal to rectal tumors and explore the significance of PCN dissection in the prognosis of patients with rectal cancer. ?Methods:This was a prospective observational cohort study. The clinical data of 457 consecutive patients with rectal cancer who underwent radical surgery at the Colorectal Tumor Center of West China Hospital, Sichuan University from January 2015 to May 2022 were included. Inclusion criteria: (1) Pathologically confirmed rectal adenocarcinoma (anal margin ≤ 12 cm); (2) R0 resection was performed with a proximal margin ≥ 10 cm (measured on the in vivo specimen during surgery after intestinal mobilization); (3) For stage IV patients, only those with resectable metastatic lesions by R0 were included; (4) Patients who completed the full course of neoadjuvant therapy (TNT) must meet the surgical window of 8-12 weeks after radiotherapy. Exclusion criteria: tumors located more than 15 cm from the anal margin, synchronous multiple primary colorectal cancers, positive tumor margins, preoperative imaging suggesting lateral lymph node metastasis (LLNM), presence of Lynch syndrome or familial adenomatous polyposis, emergency surgery, recurrence after rectal cancer surgery, T4b tumors requiring combined organ resection, previous radiotherapy and chemotherapy for non-rectal cancer, and those with cardiac, pulmonary, renal and other organ dysfunction that could not tolerate surgery. After standard total mesorectal excision (TME), the proximal intestinal tube was transected at a level more than 10 cm above the lesion, and then intestinal anastomosis or enterostomy was completed. The distance from the tumor edge was marked and measured in vivo during the operation, and lymph nodes were harvested from the fresh specimen. Patients with PCN metastasis beyond 10 cm proximal to the tumor were classified into the positive lymph node group (pPCN group), while those without PCN metastasis beyond 10 cm proximal to the tumor were classified into the negative lymph node group (nPCN group). The differences in clinicopathological characteristics, overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS) between the two groups were compared, and risk factor analysis and survival analysis of pPCN were performed.Results:There were 16 cases (3.5%) in the pPCN group, 15 cases (3.3%) had central lymph node metastasis; the nPCN group included 441 cases. When comparing the baseline characteristics between the pPCN group and the nPCN group, there was no statistically significant difference in other aspects except that the cN stage was more advanced in the pPCN group ( P=0.006) (all P>0.05). The number of positive mesenteric lymph nodes in the pPCN group was higher than that in the nPCN group ( P<0.001), and the proportion of patients with a total number of harvested lymph nodes ≥12 and the number of lymph nodes with a short diameter >5 mm were both higher (all P<0.05). The proportion of patients with positive lymph nodes within 10 cm and the number of positive lymph nodes within 10 cm were also higher in the pPCN group (both P<0.001). Similar to the clinical TNM staging, the proportions of patients with pT3 and N2 stages, as well as the incidence of poorly differentiated tumors (G3, G4) were higher in the pPCN group ( P<0.001). The results of multivariate analysis showed that among the preoperative pathological characteristic variables, the presence of positive lymph nodes within 10 cm (OR=14.869, 95%CI: 2.993-73.858, P=0.001) and low tumor differentiation grade (OR=7.189, 95%CI: 2.091- 24.714, P=0.002) were independent risk factors for pPCN. The median follow-up time of the patients in this group was 63 (0-63) months. No local recurrence occurred in the pPCN group, and the 5-year OS was 50.0%, which was significantly lower than 78.0% in the nPCN group (HR=2.496, 95%CI: 1.263-4.930, P=0.008). The 3-year DFS was 43.8%, also significantly lower than 77.7% in the nPCN group (HR=2.950, 95%CI:1.488-5.846, P=0.002). Multivariate Cox prognostic analysis suggested that age ≥65 years (HR=2.041, 95%CI: 1.375-3.031, P<0.001), female (HR=1.838, 95%CI: 1.171-2.884, P=0.008), tumor length ≥3 cm (HR=1.747, 95%CI: 1.076-2.834, P=0.024), more advanced cT stage (HR=2.865, 95%CI: 1.234-6.653, P=0.014), and cM1 (HR=4.368, 95%CI: 2.480-7.694, P<0.001) were independent risk factors affecting OS. No neoadjuvant therapy (HR=0.636, 95%CI: 0.413-0.980, P=0.040) and cM1 (HR=5.556, 95%CI: 3.335-9.256, P<0.001) were independent risk factors affecting DFS. pPCN showed a tendency to be an independent risk factor for DFS (HR=1.942, 95%CI: 0.966-3.906, P=0.063). Conclusion:The incidence of pPCN is higher than expected, and the prognosis of patients is poor. Patients with high-risk factors may benefit from extended proximal intestinal resection (>10 cm) to avoid residual positive PCN, thereby reducing local recurrence.
10.Lateral fusion after oblique lateral lumbar interbody fusion: incidence, imaging characteristics, and contributing factors
Yongjun TONG ; Chudi FU ; Junhui LIU ; Bao HUANG ; Yilei CHEN ; Zhi SHAN ; Xuyang ZHANG ; Shunwu FAN ; Fengdong ZHAO
Chinese Journal of Orthopaedics 2025;45(7):420-428
Objective:To evaluate the characteristic manifestations of lumbar fusion following oblique lateral interbody fusion (OLIF), determine the specific incidence of these patterns, and the identify factors associated with fusion characteristics.Methods:This retrospective study analyzed 209 patients who underwent OLIF surgery at Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine, between July 2017 and September 2023. The cohort had a mean age of 64.2±9.8 years and included 125 males and 84 females. A total of 338 lumbar segments were assessed, comprising 159 segments treated with stand-alone OLIF (OLIF-SA) and 179 segments treated with OLIF combined with posterior pedicle screw fixation (OLIF-PSF). Inclusion criteria were: patients aged 18-80 years who underwent OLIF with complete radiographic records. Surgical parameters, including fixation method, number of fused segments, surgical approach, and cage dimensions (height and width), were obtained from operative records. Radiographic evaluation included preoperative osteophytes, Hounsfield unit (HU) values of endplates, and cage positioning. Fusion rate, fusion pattern (lateral vs. central), cage subsidence, and related influencing factors were assessed. Clinical outcomes were measured via the Oswestry disability index (ODI) and visual analog scale (VAS) preoperatively, immediately postoperatively, and at 1-year follow-up. Results:The overall fusion rate was 98.2% (332/338), with a non-union rate of 1.8% (6/338). The incidence of lateral fusion was 40.2% (136/338). In the OLIF-SA group, lateral and central fusion rates were 50.3% (80/159) and 49.7% (79/159), respectively, with no cases of non-union. In the OLIF-PSF group, lateral fusion occurred in 31.3% (56/179), central fusion in 65.4% (117/179), and non-union in 3.3% (6/179), with statistically significant differences between groups ( P<0.05). Preoperative osteophytes and higher endplate HU values were significantly associated with lateral fusion ( P<0.05). However, cage dimensions and cage position (anterior-posterior and lateral placement) were not significantly associated with fusion pattern ( P>0.05). Overall, 61.5% (208/338) of segments showed no cage subsidence; 24.5% (83/338) had settling, and 14.0% (47/338) had grade 1 or higher subsidence. Among lateral fusion cases, the rates of no subsidence, anchoring, grade 1, grade 2, and grade 3 subsidence were 67.6%, 21.3%, 7.4%, 3.9%, and 0.7%, respectively. In the central fusion group, these rates were 59.2%, 27.6%, 9.2%, 2.5%, and 1.3%, respectively. In the non-union group, grade 2 and 3 subsidence occurred in 50% (3/6) each, significantly higher than in the other fusion groups ( P<0.05). Post hoc analysis confirmed that grade 2 and 3 subsidence rates were significantly elevated in the non-union group compared to the lateral and central fusion groups, while other subsidence categories showed no significant differences across groups. Clinically, patients showed significant improvements in ODI and VAS scores following surgery ( P<0.05). Conclusions:Lateral fusion occurred in 40.2% of OLIF cases. The OLIF-SA technique, preoperative osteophytes, and elevated preoperative HU values were significantly associated with lateral fusion. In contrast, surgical approach, number of fused segments, cage height, width, and cage positioning did not significantly influence the occurrence of lateral fusion.

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