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Surgical vs Conservative Management of Back Pain

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Surgical vs Conservative Management of Back Pain. Jennifer Morrison. ACC Conference ... WM is a 49yo AAM w/ DM, HTN, and depression who presents w/ 2 month hx of low ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Surgical vs Conservative Management of Back Pain


1
Surgical vs Conservative Management of Back Pain
  • Jennifer Morrison
  • ACC Conference
  • June 6, 2007

2
Outline
  • Cases
  • Brief background
  • Recent Study Results
  • Practical Application to our Clinic Patients

3
The Cases Mr. WM. and Mrs. PR.
  • WM is a 49yo AAM w/ DM, HTN, and depression who
    presents w/ 2 month hx of low back pain and pain
    radiating down lateral left leg. Denies trauma,
    denies bowel or bladder incontinence.
  • Exam SLR and crossed SLR (elicits pain and
    paresthesias along L lateral thigh and calf), no
    overt sensory loss, strength testing intact,
    DTRs intact, no muscle atrophy.
  • Imaging disk herniation at the L4-L5 level.

4
The Cases WM and PR
  • PR is a 58yo AAF w/ DM, HTN, and HL presents w/ 2
    month hx of low back pain and pain radiating into
    her buttocks and thighs with walking, better with
    sitting. Denies bowel or bladder incontinence.
  • Exam wide stooped gait, pain in buttocks
    thighs w/ lumbar extension, improved when sitting
    or w/ lumbar flexion. Somewhat diminished ankle
    jerk, intact LE sensation, strength intact.
  • Imaging spondylolisthesis at the L4-L5 level,
    degenerative changes of the facet joints, spinal
    stenosis.

5
Low Back Pain- DDx
  • Mechanical- lumbar strain, degenerative disease,
    disk herniation, spondylolisthesis,
    spondylolysis, spinal stenosis, compression
    fracture
  • Infection (OM, diskitis, paraspinous abscess)
  • Cancer (MM, metastatic disease)
  • Spondyloarthropathy (AS, RS)
  • Other (pyelonephritis, nephrolithiasis,
    pancreatitis, AAA)

6
How should our pts be managed?
  • The May 31, 2007 issue of NEJM published 2 papers
    concerning role of surgery vs conservative
    treatment in the management of disk herniation w/
    associated sciatica and degenerative
    spondylolisthesis w/ associated spinal stenosis.

7
Spondylolisthesis
Disk herniation
8
Diskectomy
9
Laminectomy and Spinal Fusion
10
Surgery vs Prolonged Conservative Treatment for
Sciatica
  • Peul, et al. NEJM. 356(22) 2245-2256.
  • RCT, nonblinded- pts w/ 6-12 wk hx of severe
    sciatica were randomized to early surgery or
    conservative treatment w/ surgery later if
    needed.
  • Early Surgery- microdiskectomy w/in 2 wks. In
    conserv. group, if sciatica persisted 6 mos,
    surgery was offered.
  • 1? Outcomes disability, leg pain, patient
    perceived recovery
  • Intention-to-treat analysis

11
Peul et al.- Early Surgery vs Conservative
Treatment for Sciatica
  • Inclusion 18-65, disk herniation w/ radicular
    syndrome for 6-12 wks
  • Exclusion cauda equina syndrome, severe
    weakness or paralysis, similar episode during
    previous 12 mos, previous spine surgery,
    spondylolisthesis, bony stenosis, pregnancy,
    severe coexisting disease

12
Peul et al.- Early Surgery vs Conservative
Treatment for Sciatica
  • 283 pts were randomized
  • Pt population
  • Mean age early 40s
  • 63-68 male
  • Mean BMI 26
  • Duration of sciatica 9.5 wks
  • Most had L4-L5 or L5-S1 disk herniation

13
Peul et al. Results
  • 89 in early surgery group and 39 in
    conservative group underwent surgery.
  • There was significant improvement in leg pain in
    favor of early surgery (P lt0.001).
  • Back and leg pain were relieved earlier with
    surgery than w/ conservative mgmt but at 1 year,
    nearly equal recovery rates were noted.
  • Time to recovery (median) was 4 wks for early
    surgery group and 12 wks for conservative mgmt
    group.
  • Complications in 1.6- 2 dural tears and 1 wound
    hematoma.

14
Peul et al. Conclusions
  • Though sx relief was twice as fast in those
    treated w/ early surgery, there was no better
    overall functional recovery rate at 1 yr in the
    early surgery group (vs prolonged conservative
    mgmt w/ offer of surgery later).
  • Limitations
  • Not blinded
  • Research nurses participated in pain mgmt- not
    usual care
  • Heterogeneity of treatment interventions
  • Treatment group crossover

15
Surgical vs. Nonsurgical Treatment for Lumbar
Degenerative Spondylolisthesis
  • Weinstein, et al. NEJM. 356(22) 2257-2270.
    SPORT trail.
  • Randomized and observational cohorts- pt choice.
    Treatment groups standard decompressive
    laminectomy (w/ or w/out fusion) or usual care
    (PT, education, epidural injections, opioids,
    NSAIDS).
  • Inclusion at least 12 wks sx due to degenerative
    spondylolisthesis, surgical candidate
  • Exclusion spondylolysis, isthmic
    spondylolisthesis, cancer, infection, fracture
  • 1? Outcomes general health and disability at 6
    wks, 3 mos, 1 yr, and 2 yrs.
  • Intention-to-treat and as-treated analyses

16
SPORT- Surgical vs Nonsurgical Treatment for
Spondylolithesis
  • 303 pts in observational cohort- 173 chose
    surgery, 130 chose nonsurgical treatment
  • 304 pts in randomized cohort- 159 assigned to
    surgery, 145 assigned to nonsurgical treatment
  • Pt population
  • Mean age 66, 66-71 female (mostly Caucasian)
  • Mean BMI 29
  • In surgery vs nonsurgery groups, pts were more
    likely to be younger (65 vs 68), to be
    compensated, w/ more perceived pain and
    disability (P lt 0.05).

17
SPORT- Surgical vs Nonsurgical Mgmt of
Spondylolithesis- Results
  • Intention-to-treat analysis showed no significant
    effects
  • Severely limited by treatment crossover

Randomized To Surgery
Randomized To Nonsurg Mgmt
6 wk 3 mos 6 mos 1 yr 2 yrs
9 36 53 57 64
8 24 38 44 49
of group that underwent surgery
18
SPORT- Surgical vs Nonsurgical Mgmt of
Spondylolithesis- Results
  • As-treated effects for combined cohort were
    statistically significant in favor of surgery for
    all outcomes (sx relief, improved function)-
    stable for 2 yrs.
  • Complications
  • 9-11 dural tear or CSF leak
  • 1 vascular injury
  • Transfusions (34-36 intra-op, 16-26 post-op)

19
SPORT- Surgical vs Nonsurgical Mgmt of
Spondylolithesis- Conclusions
  • Pts w/ degenerative spondylolisthesis and
    associated spinal stenosis treated surgically may
    have greater improvement in pain and function
    than pts treated nonsurgically.

20
Study Limitations
  • Marked degree of nonadherence to randomized
    treatment.
  • Potential confounding factors, bias.
  • As-treated analysis
  • Heterogeneity of treatment interventions
  • Nonsurgical mgmt
  • Surgical procedures
  • Not blinded.

21
Application of these Data to our Patient
Population
  • Sciatica- may achieve sx relief faster w/ surgery
    but in the long run, no clear benefit
  • Degenerative Spondylolisthesis- no clear
    benefits, trial was flawed which limits the
    conclusions we can draw.
  • Use data presented in the above trials to have
    informed discussions w/ pts, weigh risks and
    potential benefits, consider the tolerability of
    sx/pain, etc.

22
References
  • Deyo, R.A. Back Surgery- Who Needs It? NEJM.
    2007. 356(22) 2239-2243.
  • Peul, W.C., et al. Prolonged conservative
    treatment or early surgery in sciatica caused
    by a lumbar disc herniation rationale and design
    of a randomized trial. BMC Musculoskeletal
    Disorders. 2005. 6(8) 1-11.
  • Peul, W.C., et al. Surgery versus Prolonged
    Conservative Treatment for Sciatica. NEJM.
    2007. 356(22) 2245-2256.
  • Weinstein, J. N., et al. Surgical versus
    Nonsurgical Treatment for Lumbar Degenerative
    Spondylolisthesis. NEJM. 2007. 356(22)
    2257-2270.
  • Weinstein, J. N., et al. Surgical vs
    Nonoperative Treatment for Lumbar Disk
    Herniation The SPORT A Randomized Trial.
    JAMA. 2006. 296(20) 2441-2450.
  • Weinstein, J. N., et al. Surgical vs
    Nonoperative Treatment for Lumbar Disk
    Herniation The SPORT Observational Cohort.
    JAMA. 2006. 296(20) 2451-2459.
  • www.uptodate.com and references herein.
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