| Literature DB >> 24886911 |
Haifei Zhang1, Feng Wang2, Lin Ding3, Zhiyu Zhang2, Deri Sun2, Xinmin Feng2, Jiuli An2, Yue Zhu1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bone morphogenetic protein (BMPs) as a substitute for iliac crest bone graft (ICBG) has been increasingly widely used in lumbar fusion. The purpose of this study is to systematically compare the effectiveness and safety of fusion with BMPs for the treatment of lumbar disease.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24886911 PMCID: PMC4041715 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0097049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram.
Overview of included trials.
| 1stAuthor, publication year | Country conducted | Preoperative diagnosis | Comparisons | Sample sizeT/C | Female (%) | Mean age(year)T/C | Follow-up (month) | Follow-up rate(%) |
| Boden 2000 | United States | Single-level lumbar DDDSpondylolisthesis ≤ grade 1 | rhBMP-2/ACS vs. ICBG (ALIF) | 11/3 | 50 | 42.5/40.2 | 24 | 100 |
| Boden 2002 | United States | Single-level lumbar DDDSpondylolisthesis ≤ grade 1 | rhBMP-2/BCP vs. ICBG (PLF with/without TSRH) | 11/5 | 68.8 | 57.6/52.9 | 17 | 100 |
| Burkus Gornet 2002 | United States | Single-level lumbar DDD | rhBMP-2/ACS vs. ICBG.(ALIF) | 143/136 | 47.7 | 43.3/42.3 | 24 | 91.7 |
| Burkus Transfeldt 2002 | United States | Single-level lumbar DDD | rhBMP-2(InFUSE) vs. ICBG.(ALIF) | 24/22 | 60.9 | 41.5/45.6 | 24 | 95.7 |
| Johnsson 2002 | Sweden | L5 spondylolysis and vertebral slip ≤50%, | BMP-7 vs. ICBG.(uninstrumented PLF) | 10/10 | 60 | 42.9/40.4 | 12 | 100 |
| Burkus 2003 | United States | degenerative lumbar spondylosis | rhBMP-2/ACS vs. ICBG.(ALIF) | 22/20 | 47.6 | 41.7/44.2 | 24 | 100 |
| Assiri 2004 | Canada | DDD | rhBMP-2 vs. ICBG. (PLF) | 8/7 | NR | NR | 24 | NR |
| Haid 2004 | United States | Single-level lumbar DDDSpondylolisthesis ≤ grade 1 | rhBMP-2/ACS vs. ICBG.(PLIF) | 34/33 | 52.2 | 46.3/46.1 | 24 | 94 |
| Glassman 2005 | United States | Single-level lumbar DDDSpondylolisthesis ≤ grade 1 | rhBMP-2/CRM vs. ICBG.(PLF) | 38/36 | 59.5 | 53/53 | 12 | 97 |
| Vaccaro 2005 | United States | single-level degenerativespondylolisthesis and stenosis | BMP-7 vs. ICBG.(uninstrumented PLF) | 24/12 | 55.6 | 63/66 | 24 | 88.9 |
| Burkus 2005 | United States | Single-level lumbar DDD | rhBMP-2/ACS vs. ICBG.(ALIF) | 79/52 | 61.1 | 40.2/43.6 | 24 | 99.2 |
| Dimar 2006 | United States | Single-level lumbar DDDSpondylolisthesis ≤ grade 1 | rhBMP-2/CRM vs. ICBG.(PLF) | 53/45 | 57.1 | 50.9/52.7 | 24 | 100 |
| Kanayama 2006 | Japan | degenerativespondylolisthesis with stenosis | BMP-7 vs. ICBG.(PLF) | 9/10 | 42.1 | 70.3/58.7 | 13–16 | 100 |
| Glassman 2008 | United States | Single/multilevel lumbar DDD; spondylolisthesis; stenosis;adjacent level fusion | rhBMP-2/ACS vs. ICBG.(PLF) | 50/52 | 68.6 | 69.9/69.2 | 24 | 94.3 |
| Vaccaro 2008 | United States | single-level degenerativespondylolisthesis and stenosis | BMP-7 vs. ICBG.(uninstrumented PLF) | 208/87 | 66.9 | 68/69 | >48 | 80 |
| Dimar 2009 | United States | Single-level lumbar DDDSpondylolisthesis ≤ grade 1 | rhBMP-2 matrix vs. ICBG.(PLIF) | 239/224 | 56.2 | 53.2/52.3 | 24 | 89 |
| Dawson 2009 | United States | Single-level lumbar DDDSpondylolisthesis ≤ grade 1 | rhBMP-2/ACS vs. ICBG.(PLIF) | 25/21 | 58.7 | 55.9/56.9 | 24 | 87 |
| Delawi 2010 | Netherlands | Spondylolisthesis ≤ grade 2 | BMP-7 vs. ICBG.(PLF) | 18/16 | 52.9 | 53/55 | 12 | 94.4 |
| Michielsen 2013 | Belgium | Single-level lumbar DDD | rhBMP-2/ACS vs. ICBG.(PLIF) | 19/19 | 57.8 | 43.2/42.2 | 12 | 100 |
ACS: absorbable collagen sponge carrier; ICBG: autogenous iliac crest bone graft;
BCP: biphasic calcium phosphate; CRM: compression resistant matrix; DDD: degenerative disc disease; NR: no report.
Figure 2Risk of bias summary.
GRADE profile for the quality of evidence related to the assessment for Lumbar Spine using BMPs and ICBG.
| Quality assessment | No of patients | Effect | Quality | Importance | ||||||||
| No of studies | Design | Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Other considerations | BMPs | ICBG | Relative(95% CI) | Absolute | ||
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| 17 | randomised trials | serious | no serious inconsistency | no serious indirectness | no serious imprecision | none | 547/610 (89.7%) | 410/523 (78.4%) | RR 1.13 (1.05 to 1.23) | 102 more per 1000 (from 39 more to 180 more) | ⊕⊕⊕○ | CRITICAL |
| 70.6% | 92 more per 1000 (from 35 more to 162 more) | MODERATE | ||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||
| 8 | randomised trials | no serious risk of bias | no serious inconsistency | no serious indirectness | serious | reporting bias | 339/431 (78.7%) | 199/265 (75.1%) | RR 1.04 (0.95 to 1.13) | 30 more per 1000 (from 38 fewer to 98 more) | ⊕⊕○○ | CRITICAL |
| 70% | 28 more per 1000 (from 35 fewer to 91 more) | LOW | ||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||
| 9 | randomised trials | no serious risk of bias | no serious inconsistency | no serious indirectness | serious | none | 112/605 (18.5%) | 87/444 (19.6%) | RR 0.96 (0.85 to 1.09) | 8 fewer per 1000 (from 29 fewer to 18 more) | ⊕⊕⊕○ | CRITICAL |
| 23.1% | 9 fewer per 1000 (from 35 fewer to 21 more) | MODERATE | ||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||
| 14 | randomised trials | Serious | no serious inconsistency | no serious indirectness | Serious | none | 72/1004(7.2%) | 100/766(13.1%) | RR 0.57 (0.42 to 0.77) | 56 fewer per 1000 (from 30 fewer to 76 fewer) | ⊕⊕○○ | CRITICAL |
| 10.2% | 44 fewer per 1000 (from 23 fewer to 59 fewer) | LOW | ||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||
| 9 | randomised trials | no serious risk of bias | very serious | no serious indirectness | serious | reporting bias | 435 | 388 | MD 0.32 lower (0.55 to 0.08 lower) | ⊕○○○ | IMPORTANT | |
| ?VERY LOW | ||||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||
| 8 | randomised trials | no serious risk of bias | very serious | no serious indirectness | Serious | reporting bias | 411 | 376 | MD 50.24 lower (117.38 lower to 16.9 higher) | ⊕○○○ | IMPORTANT | |
| ?VERY LOW | ||||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||
| 7 | randomised trials | no serious risk of bias | Serious | no serious indirectness | serious | none | 377 | 332 | MD 0.56 lower (1.12 to 0.01 lower) | ⊕⊕○○ | IMPORTANT | |
| LOW | ||||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||
| 4 | randomised trials | no serious risk of bias | no serious inconsistency | no serious indirectness | Serious | none | 147/186 (79%) | 125/165 (75.8%) | RR 1.06 (0.86 to 1.32) | 45 more per 1000 (from 106 fewer to 242 more) | ⊕⊕⊕○ | IMPORTANT |
| 70% | 42 more per 1000 (from 98 fewer to 224 more) | MODERATE | ||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||
| 2 | randomised trials | serious | serious | no serious indirectness | very serious | none | 22/23 (95.7%) | 24/27 (88.9%) | RR 1.1 (0.69 to 1.76) | 89 more per 1000 (from 276 fewer to 676 more) | ⊕⊕○○ | IMPORTANT |
| 83.3% | 83 more per 1000 (from 258 fewer to 633 more) | VERY LOW | ||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||
| 7 | randomised trials | no serious risk of bias | no serious inconsistency | no serious indirectness | Serious | none | 229/471 (48.6%) | 197/416 (47.4%) | RR 1.05 (0.85 to 1.3) | 24 more per 1000 (from 71 fewer to 142 more) | ⊕⊕⊕○ | IMPORTANT |
| 42.4% | 21 more per 1000 (from 64 fewer to 127 more) | MODERATE | ||||||||||
seven studies with a high risk of bias;
Asymmetry in funnel plot;
less than 75% of the studies present data that can be included in a meta-analysis;
five studies with a high risk of bias;
RR = 0.56;
I2 = 79%;
I2 = 77%;
I2 = 70%;
one study including more than 50% patients has a high risk of bias;
I2 = 70%;
only two studies including total 50 patients present data that can be included in a meta-analysis.
Clinical relevance.
| Boden 2000 | Boden 2002 | Burkus & Gornet 2002 | Burkus& Transfeldt2002 | johnsson 2002 | Burkus 2003 | Assiri 2004 | Haid2004 | Burkus2005 | Glassman 2005 | Vaccaro 2005 | Dimar2006 | Kanayama 2006 | Glassman 2008 | Vaccaro 2008 | Dawson 2009 | Dimar 2009 | Delawi 2010 | Michielsen 2013 | ||
| 1 | Are the patients described in detail so that you can decide whetherthey are comparable to those that you see in your practice? | + | + | + | + | + | + | ? | + | + | + | ? | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + |
| 2 | Are the interventions and treatment settings described well enoughso that you can provide the same for your patients? | + | + | + | + | + | + | ? | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + |
| 3 | Were all clinically relevant outcomes measured and reported? | + | + | ? | + | ? | − | ? | _ | ? | + | ? | ? | + | + | ? | + | + | + | + |
| 4 | Is the size of the effect clinically important? | + | + | − | + | ? | − | ? | + | + | + | − | − | − | − | + | − | − | − | + |
| 5 | Are the likely treatment benefits worth the potential harms? | + | ? | + | + | − | + | ? | + | + | + | + | ? | + | + | + | + | + | + | − |
Figure 3Forest plot-fusion rate.
Figure 4Forest plot- overall clinical success.
Figure 5Forest plot- complications.
Figure 6Forest plot- reoperation rate.
Figure 7Forest plot- operating time.
Figure 8Forest plot- blood loss.
Figure 9Forest plot- hospital stay.
Figure 10Forest plot- patient satisfaction.
Figure 11Forest plot- work status.
Figure 12Forest plot- return to work status.
Figure 13Funnel plot-fusion rate.