Screening of Metal Hypersensitivity in Pediatric Spine Surgery vs. Pectus Excavatum: A Comparative Cohort Study
Wasim Shihab, Alvin Jones, Scott Emmert, Raphael H Parrado, Tiffany Ruan, Nichole Leitsinger, Lindsay Schultz, Viral Jain, Michael Sherenian, Amal Assa'ad

TL;DR
This study compares metal hypersensitivity rates in children undergoing spine surgery versus pectus excavatum repair, finding higher hypersensitivity in the latter group.
Contribution
The study introduces a comparative analysis of metal hypersensitivity screening practices and outcomes in two pediatric orthopedic procedures.
Findings
Spine surgery patients had a 3.3% hypersensitivity rate, while pectus excavatum patients had 12.8%.
Spine patients were less likely to test positive despite being older and more female-dominated.
Selective screening in spine surgery may underdiagnose hypersensitivity compared to routine testing.
Abstract
Introduction: Metal hypersensitivity is a type-IV delayed-type hypersensitivity reaction that may contribute to complications in orthopedic surgeries. While its clinical relevance remains uncertain, immune responses to implants have been documented. Pediatric spinal deformity correction and pectus excavatum repair often involve the use of metal implants that contain known allergens, including nickel, cobalt, and chromium. Despite extensive adult data, prevalence in pediatric spine surgery remains underexplored. Methods: This retrospective cohort study reviewed pediatric patients who underwent posterior spinal fusion with instrumentation or the Nuss procedure for pectus excavatum repair between 2014 and 2020. The spine cohort underwent selective preoperative screening based on a self-reported metal sensitivity questionnaire, while the pectus cohort received routine preoperative Patch…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMusicians’ Health and Performance · Contact Dermatitis and Allergies · Musculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation
