Mohanty Sarthak, Barchick Stephen, Kadiyala Manasa, Lad Meeki, Rouhi Armaun D, Vadali Chetan, Albayar Ahmed, Ozturk Ali K, Khalsa Amrit, Saifi Comron, Casper David S
Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, 3400 Civic Center Boulevard, Philadelphia, PA, 19104, USA.
University of Pennsylvania, Department of Orthopaedics; 3737 Market St, Philadelphia, PA, 19104, USA.
Spine J. 2023 Jan;23(1):92-104. doi: 10.1016/j.spinee.2022.08.020. Epub 2022 Sep 3.
Degenerative lumbar spondylolisthesis is one of the most common pathologies addressed by surgeons. Recently, data demonstrated improved outcomes with fusion in conjunction with laminectomy compared to laminectomy alone. However, given not all degenerative spondylolistheses are clinically comparable, the best treatment option may depend on multiple parameters. Specifically, the impact of spinopelvic alignment on patient reported and clinical outcomes following fusion versus decompression for grade I spondylolisthesis has yet to be explored.
This study assessed two-year clinical outcomes and one-year patient reported outcomes following laminectomy with concomitant fusion versus laminectomy alone for management of grade I degenerative spondylolisthesis and stenosis. The present study is the first to examine the effect of spinopelvic alignment on patient-reported and clinical outcomes following decompression alone versus decompression with fusion.
STUDY DESIGN/SETTING: Retrospective sub-group analysis of observational, prospectively collected cohort study.
679 patients treated with laminectomy with fusion or laminectomy alone for grade I degenerative spondylolisthesis and comorbid spinal stenosis performed by orthopaedic and neurosurgeons at three medical centers affiliated with a single, tertiary care center.
The primary outcome was the change in Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS), Global Physical Health (GPH), and Global Mental Health (GMH) scores at baseline and post-operatively at 4-6 and 10-12 months postoperatively. Secondary outcomes included operative parameters (estimated blood loss and operative time), and two-year clinical outcomes including reoperations, duration of postoperative physical therapy, and discharge disposition.
Radiographs/MRIs assessed stenosis, spondylolisthesis, pelvic incidence, lumbar lordosis, sacral slope, and pelvic tilt; from this data, two cohorts were created based on pelvic incidence minus lumbar lordosis (PILL), denoted as "high" and "low" mismatch. Patients underwent either decompression or decompression with fusion; propensity score matching (PSM) and coarsened exact matching (CEM) were used to create matched cohorts of "cases" (fusion) and "controls" (decompression). Binary comparisons used McNemar test; continuous outcomes used Wilcoxon rank-sum test. Between-group comparisons of changes in PROMIS GPH and GMH scores were analyzed using mixed-effects models; analyses were conducted separately for patients with high and low pelvic incidence-lumbar lordosis (PILL) mismatch.
49.9% of patients (339) underwent lumbar decompression with fusion, while 50.1% (340) received decompression. In the high PLL mismatch cohort at 10-12 months postoperatively, fusion-treated patients reported improved PROs, including GMH (26.61 vs. 20.75, p<0.0001) and GPH (23.61 vs. 18.13, p<0.0001). They also required fewer months of outpatient physical therapy (1.61 vs. 3.65, p<0.0001) and had lower 2-year reoperation rates (12.63% vs. 17.89%, p=0.0442) compared to decompression-only patients. In contrast, in the low PLL mismatch cohort, fusion-treated patients demonstrated worse endpoint PROs (GMH: 18.67 vs. 21.52, p<0.0001; GPH: 16.08 vs. 20.74, p<0.0001). They were also more likely to require skilled nursing/rehabilitation centers (6.86% vs. 0.98%, p=0.0412) and extended outpatient physical therapy (2.47 vs. 1.34 months, p<0.0001) and had higher 2-year reoperation rates (25.49% vs. 14.71%,p=0.0152).
Lumbar laminectomy with fusion was superior to laminectomy in health-related quality of life and reoperation rate at two years postoperatively only for patients with sagittal malalignment, represented by high PILL mismatch. In contrast, the addition of fusion for patients with low-grade spondylolisthesis, spinal stenosis, and spinopelvic harmony (low PILL mismatch) resulted in worse quality of life outcomes and reoperation rates.
退变性腰椎滑脱是外科医生治疗的最常见病症之一。最近,数据表明与单纯椎板切除术相比,融合术联合椎板切除术的效果更佳。然而,鉴于并非所有退变性腰椎滑脱在临床上都具有可比性,最佳治疗方案可能取决于多个参数。具体而言,对于I度腰椎滑脱患者,脊柱骨盆矢状位对线在融合与减压术后对患者报告结局和临床结局的影响尚未得到探讨。
本研究评估了I度退变性腰椎滑脱和椎管狭窄患者单纯椎板切除术与联合融合术的两年临床结局和一年患者报告结局。本研究首次探讨了脊柱骨盆矢状位对线在单纯减压与减压联合融合术后对患者报告结局和临床结局的影响。
研究设计/设置:对前瞻性收集的队列研究进行回顾性亚组分析。
在一家三级医疗中心附属的三个医疗中心,由骨科和神经外科医生对679例因I度退变性腰椎滑脱和合并脊柱管狭窄接受椎板切除术联合融合术或单纯椎板切除术的患者进行研究。
主要结局是患者报告结局测量信息系统(PROMIS)、总体身体健康(GPH)和总体心理健康(GMH)评分在基线、术后4-6个月和10-12个月的变化。次要结局包括手术参数(估计失血量和手术时间)以及两年临床结局,包括再次手术、术后物理治疗持续时间和出院处置情况。
通过X线片/MRI评估椎管狭窄、腰椎滑脱、骨盆入射角、腰椎前凸、骶骨倾斜度和骨盆倾斜度;根据这些数据,基于骨盆入射角减去腰椎前凸(PILL)创建两个队列,分别表示为“高”和“低”不匹配。患者接受减压或减压联合融合术;采用倾向得分匹配(PSM)和精确匹配(CEM)创建“病例”(融合术)和“对照”(减压术)的匹配队列。二元比较采用McNemar检验;连续结局采用Wilcoxon秩和检验。使用混合效应模型分析PROMIS GPH和GMH评分变化的组间差异;分别对骨盆入射角-腰椎前凸(PILL)不匹配高和低的患者进行分析。
49.9%的患者(339例)接受了腰椎减压联合融合术,而50.1%(340例)接受了减压术。在术后10-12个月的高PILL不匹配队列中,接受融合术治疗的患者报告的结局指标有所改善,包括GMH(26.61对20.75,p<0.0001)和GPH(23.61对18.13,p<0.0001)。与单纯减压患者相比,他们所需的门诊物理治疗月数更少(1.61对3.65,p<0.0001),两年再次手术率更低(12.63%对17.89%,p=0.0442)。相比之下,在低PILL不匹配队列中,接受融合术治疗的患者的终点结局指标更差(GMH:18.67对21.52,p<0.0001;GPH:16.08对20.74,p<0.0001)。他们也更有可能需要专业护理/康复中心(6.86%对0.98%,p=0.0412)和更长时间的门诊物理治疗(2.47对1.34个月,p<0.0001),两年再次手术率更高(25.49%对14.71%,p=0.0152)。
仅对于以高PILL不匹配为代表的矢状位排列不齐的患者,腰椎减压联合融合术在术后两年的健康相关生活质量和再次手术率方面优于单纯椎板切除术。相比之下,对于低度腰椎滑脱、脊柱管狭窄和脊柱骨盆协调(低PILL不匹配)的患者,加用融合术会导致更差的生活质量结局和再次手术率。