Predicting cage subsidence after lumbar interbody fusion: a meta-analysis of opportunistic bone quality metrics.

Patel S., Nischal SA., Nallankuka GS., Kale KM., Sarikonda A., Saad H., Hines KJ., Jallo J., Harrop JS., Prasad SK.

BACKGROUND CONTEXT: Cage subsidence (CS) is a frequent complication following lumbar interbody fusion and is closely linked to vertebral and endplate bone quality. Although CT- and MRI-derived bone metrics are increasingly used for preoperative risk stratification, their comparative discriminative performance for CS has not been systematically evaluated. PURPOSE: To evaluate and compare the discriminative performance of CT- and MRI-derived bone quality metrics for CS following degenerative lumbar fusion. STUDY DESIGN/SETTING: Systematic review and meta-analysis. METHODS: PubMed, Embase, and CENTRAL were searched from inception to January 2026. Observational studies reporting preoperative imaging-based bone quality metrics in adult patients undergoing lumbar interbody fusion were included. Primary metrics included CT-based Hounsfield units, MRI-based vertebral bone quality (VBQ) and endplate bone quality (EBQ), and CT-derived bone mineral density (CT-BMD). Secondary outcomes included DEXA T-scores. Random-effects meta-analyses synthesized continuous inter-group differences and diagnostic accuracy parameters, summarized using pooled sensitivity, specificity, likelihood ratios, diagnostic odds ratios, and SROC curves. Risk of bias was assessed using QUADAS-2. RESULTS: Thirty-six studies encompassing 5482 patients were included, of whom 1679 (30.6%) developed CS. Across all metrics, patients with subsidence demonstrated poorer preoperative bone quality, including lower Hounsfield units (MD -26.9; P < 0.01), lower CT-BMD (MD -33.0; P < 0.01), and lower DEXA T-scores (MD -0.77; P < 0.01), alongside higher VBQ (MD 0.60; P < 0.01) and EBQ scores (MD 0.68; P < 0.01). Diagnostic accuracy was moderate-to-good, with pooled AUCs ranging from 0.77 to 0.85. Differences in discriminative performance between metrics were modest and non-significant on meta-regression, with nomogram analyses demonstrating risk-shifting rather than definitive rule-in or rule-out performance. CONCLUSIONS: Imaging-derived bone quality metrics demonstrate consistent associations and moderate-to-good discrimination for CS after degenerative lumbar fusion, reflecting shared vulnerability at the cage-endplate interface and supporting their use as pragmatic tools for preoperative risk stratification and surgical planning.

DOI

10.1016/j.spinee.2026.06.004

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2026-06-09T00:00:00+00:00

Keywords

Cage subsidence, Hounsfield units, bone quality, diagnostic accuracy, lumbar fusion, vertebral bone quality

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