PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Rosa M. Egea-Gámez AU - María Galán-Olleros AU - Alfonso González-Menocal AU - Carmen Martínez-González AU - Rafael González-Díaz TI - Surgical Treatment for Advanced Thoracic Spinal Tuberculosis in Infants: Case Series and Literature Review AID - 10.14444/8220 DP - 2022 Apr 01 TA - International Journal of Spine Surgery PG - 393--403 VI - 16 IP - 2 4099 - http://ijssurgery.com//content/16/2/393.short 4100 - http://ijssurgery.com//content/16/2/393.full SO - Int J Spine Surg2022 Apr 01; 16 AB - Background Spinal tuberculosis (TB), or Pott’s disease, is the most common form of osteoarticular TB. Early diagnosis and anti-TB drug therapy are the mainstays of treatment. However, in advanced stages, surgery is essential to correct spinal deformities and avoid neurological damage. Very few cases in young children requiring surgical treatment have been described. We present 2 cases of surgically treated thoracic spinal TB in patients under 2 years of age and review the literature on this entity in young children.Case Description Two male toddlers, aged 21 (patient 1) and 23 (patient 2) months, were admitted due to insidious systemic deterioration associated with neck stiffness and nonspecific abdominal pain in patient 1 and limping in patient 2. The findings of laboratory tests were unremarkable despite an increase in acute-phase reactants. After an extensive workup, results of a magnetic resonance imaging were consistent with spinal TB in both patients. Patient 1 underwent costotransversectomy of the left third and fourth ribs, debridement, T3-T4 corpectomy, and T2-T6 posterior fusion, to which an anterior rib autograft was added. Patient 2 had a right-sided thoracotomy performed at the apex in addition to debridement and T8 corpectomy; the resected rib was used as anterior structural autograft. Several samples of purulent, caseous material were sent for study. On follow-up, progression of proximal junctional kyphosis was evidenced in patient 1, requiring revision surgery to restore sagittal alignment; the patient was asymptomatic at 2-year follow-up. Patient 2 evolved satisfactorily without neurological sequelae and was asymptomatic at 4-year follow-up.Conclusions Spinal TB in young children requires appropriate surgical treatment when presenting at advanced stages or having severe deformity or neurological compromise. Despite the challenges associated with young age and ongoing growth, surgery can be performed safely provided proper surgical expertise. After extensive debridement and decompression, priority should be given to restoring sagittal alignment and balance with stable and durable spinal reconstructions.Level of Evidence 3.