| Literature DB >> 26688809 |
Giulio Anichini1, Alessandro Landi2, Federico Caporlingua2, André Beer-Furlan3, Christian Brogna4, Roberto Delfini2, Emiliano Passacantilli2.
Abstract
Endoscopic disc surgery (EDS) for lumbar spine disc herniation is a well-known but developing field, which is increasingly spreading in the last few years. Rate of recurrence/residual, complications, and outcomes, in comparison with standard microdiscectomy (MD), is still debated and need further data. We performed an extensive review based on the last 6 years of surgical series, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses reported in international, English-written literature. Articles regarding patients treated through endoscopic transforaminal or interlaminar approaches for microdiscectomy (MD) were included in the present review. Papers focused on endoscopic surgery for other spinal diseases were not included. From July 2009 to July 2015, we identified 51 surgical series, 5 systematic reviews, and one meta-analysis reported. In lumbar EDS, rate of complications, length of hospital staying, return to daily activities, and overall patients' satisfaction seem comparable to standard MD. Rate of recurrence/residual seems higher in EDS, although data are nonhomogeneous among different series. Surgical indication and experience of the performing surgeon are crucial factors affecting the outcome. There is growing but still weak evidence that lumbar EDS is a valid and safe alternative to standard open microdiscectomy. Statistically reliable data obtained from randomized controlled trials (better if multicentric) are desirable to further confirm these results.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26688809 PMCID: PMC4672102 DOI: 10.1155/2015/417801
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1(a-b) Sagittal and axial T2-weighted MRI images of an L4-L5 right disc bulging causing foraminal stenosis. Approach is performed through an entry point located ~7 cm from the midline. (c-d) Intraoperative fluoroscopy and lateral and anteroposterior (AP) projections showing the position of the instrumentation. (e) Fragment of the disc removed from the endoscopic cannula.
Figure 3(a) Instrumentation: light source at the center of the surgical table, endoscopic cannula, and different pituitary forceps adapted for endoscopic use on the top of the picture. (b) Positioning of the endoscope during an interlaminar approach. (c) Positioning of the endoscope during a transforaminal approach, extreme lateral variation.
Figure 2(a-b) Preoperative T2-weighted sagittal and axial MRI showing an L5-S1 disc herniation impinging the left S1 nerve root. (c-d) Intraoperative fluoroscopy showing different phases of the transforaminal approach. AP view: pointer showing the L5-S1 interlaminar window and lateral view showing the radiofrequency bipolar endoscopic probe inside the L5-S1 intervertebral disc. (e) Removal of the herniated disc material has been completed. At the end of the procedure, the dural sac (ds), the S1 nerve root (s1) with its axilla (a), and shoulder (s) can be clearly visualized. Taken from the senior author's personal series.
Series reported in the literature in the last 6 years. FED: full endoscopic discectomy; MED: microendoscopic discectomy; EDS: endoscopic discectomy; MD: microdiscectomy; TF: transforaminal; IL: interlaminar; OC: outcome; DVT: deep venous thrombosis. When reported alone, values are referred only to as recurrence rate.
| First author | Year | Study | Number of pts. | Techn. | OC measures | Outcome | Recurrence rate/residual/redo | Complications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Li [ | 2015 | EDS, comparison between FED and MED | 65 | TF and IL | VAS and ODI | No differences, shorter hospital staying in FED group | 8,6% FED; 6,7% MED | 1 dural tear |
| Türk [ | 2015 | Surgical series EDS | 105 | TF | VAS and ODI | 90,4% pain relief | 2 redo surgeries | Not mentioned |
| Wang [ | 2015 | Surgical series EDS | 207 | TF | VAS, ODI, and MacNab | 71–86% excellent OC, age related | 3 to 5% age-related | 3 dural tears, 1 postop instability |
| Li [ | 2015 | Surgical series EDS | 72 | IL | VAS, ODI, and MacNab | 97% good to excellent OC | 1 | No complications noted |
| Sairyo [ | 2014 | Surgical series EDS, analysis of complications | 100 | TF and IL | — | — | — | 2% nerve injury; 1% postop hematoma |
| Liao [ | 2014 | Surgical series EDS | 15 | TF | VAS and MacNab | 93% good to excellent OC | — | — |
| Sencer [ | 2014 | Surgical series EDS | 163 | TF and IL | VAS and ODI | 88% good to excellent OC | 8 (5%) | 6 (3%) dural tears; 5 (2,9%) types of postop worsening |
| Yoshimoto [ | 2014 | Surgical series EDS, comparison between far lateral and intraforaminal disc herniations removal | 25 (far lateral) + 93 (IL) | TF | VAS and JOA | No significant differences in pain relief between the two groups | — | — |
| Jasper [ | 2014 | Surgical series EDS, comparison between transforaminal and interlaminar approaches | 41 | TF and IL | VAS and MacNab | 75% pain relief in both groups | — | No complications noted |
| Xu [ | 2014 | Surgical series EDS, analysis of learning curve | 36 | IL | VAS | Excellent outcome | 2 pts. converted to open surgery | No complications noted |
| Hussein [ | 2014 | Comparison between EDS and MD | 185 | IL | NRS, MacNab, and ODI | Statistically significant pain relief in both groups | 2; 8 converted to open surgery | 3 dural tears |
| Kulkarni [ | 2014 | Surgical series EDS | 188 | IL | VAS and ODI | Statistically significant pain relief | 3 (1,5%) | 11 (5%) dural tears, 1 (0,5%) infection, and 1 (0,5%) wrong level |
| Choi [ | 2013 | Surgical series EDS, comparison between transforaminal and interlaminar approaches | 30 | TF and IL | VAS and ODI | Shorter recovery time in interlaminar | 3,3% TF; 6,7% IL | 6,7% postop dysesthesia |
|
Wang [ | 2013 | Surgical series EDS, comparison between early and delayed surgery | 145 | — | VAS and MacNab | No significant differences in pain relief between the two groups | 8 to 11% redo | No complications noted |
| Kim [ | 2013 | Surgical series EDS, comparison between interlaminar approach alone and interlaminar + annular sealing | 224 | IL | VAS and ODI | Statistically significant pain relief in both groups | 5% IL + sealing; 13% IL alone | — |
| Yoshimoto [ | 2013 | Surgical series EDS | 25 | — | JOA | 80,4% of pain improvement | 0 | No complications noted |
| Jasper [ | 2013 | Surgical series EDS | 195 | TF | VAS | 83,9% improvement in single level pathology; 69,7% improvement in multilevel | — | — |
| Wang [ | 2013 | Surgical series EDS, analysis of learning curve (comparison between 2 groups operated on by surgeons with different level of training) | 120 | TF | VAS and JOA | Significant improvements in both groups | 20 residuals, 14 (23%) group A; 6 (10%) group B; 2 recurrences | 2 postop infections |
| Choi [ | 2013 | Surgical series EDS, intraop magnetic imaging | 89 | TF | VAS, ODI, and MacNab | Significant improvement | 4 (4,5%) residuals; 2 (2%) recurrences | 2 postop hematomas |
| Jasper [ | 2013 | Surgical series EDS | 50 | TF | VAS | 71 to 75% pain relief | 10% | No complications |
| Yadav [ | 2013 | Surgical series EDS | 400 | IL | VAS and MacNab | 90% significant improvement | 2 (0,5%) | 3 facet injuries; 7 dural tears; 2 infections; 1 persistent paresthesias |
| Soliman [ | 2013 | Surgical series EDS | 41 | IL | VAS and ODI | 95% excellent to good improvement | 1 | 2 dural tears |
| Matsumoto [ | 2013 | Surgical series EDS, analysis of recurrences | 344 | — | JOA | 75 to 83% recovery rate | 37 (10,8%) | — |
| Hsu [ | 2013 | Comparison between EDS and MD | 59 | TF and IL | VAS and ODI | No significant differences between EDS and standard microdiscectomy groups | 2 recurrences, 4 persistent symptoms | 2 nerve root injuries |
| Chaichankul [ | 2012 | Surgical series EDS, analysis of learning curve | 50 | TF | VAS | Significant improvement in both groups, higher in later stages of learning curve | — | — |
| Kim [ | 2012 | Surgical series EDS for migrated discs | 18 | IL | MacNab | 89% of complete removal | 2 residuals | 1 dural tear |
| Hirano [ | 2012 | Surgical series EDS | 37 | TF and IL | VAS and JOA | Significant improvement | 2 | — |
| Yoon [ | 2012 | Surgical series, comparison of EDS and tubular-retractor microdiscectomy | 37 EDS + 35 MD | TF | VAS, ODI, and SF-36 | No significant differences between EDS and standard microdiscectomy groups | 1 in each group | 1 dural tear; 1 bowel perforation |
| Wang [ | 2012 | Surgical series EDS | 151 | — | MacNab | 91% good to excellent OC | 5 (3,5%) | 5 pts. (3,5%) dural tears; 3 pts. (2,1%) discitis |
| Lübbers [ | 2012 | Surgical series EDS | 22 | TF and IL | VAS, ODI, and MacNab | 18 pts. (81%) good OC | 2 (9,1%) | 1 stroke |
| Han [ | 2012 | Surgical series EDS, analysis of technique | 41 | TF | MacNab | 39 pts. excellent to good OC | — | 2 nerve root injuries |
| Kaushal [ | 2012 | Surgical series EDS | 300 | IL | MacNab | 90% excellent to good OC | — | 6 discitis cases; 5 dural tears; 2 nerve root injuries |
| Kim [ | 2012 | Surgical series EDS, analysis of technique | 30 | IL | — | Significant improvement | — | No complications noted |
| Tenenbaum [ | 2011 | Surgical series EDS, analysis of technique, complications, and learning curve | 124 | TF | VAS and ODI | OC comparable to open surgery | 20,9% redo surgery | 1,6% complication rate |
| Chumnanvej [ | 2011 | Surgical series EDS | 60 | IL | MacNab | 91,6% excellent outcome | 2 | No complications |
| Cho [ | 2011 | Surgical series EDS, analysis of complications | 154 | TF | VAS and ODI | Significant improvement | 3 (1,95%) | 1 dural tear; 1 discitis |
| Choi [ | 2011 | Surgical series EDS, focused on annuloplasty and LBP improvement | 52 | TF | VAS and ODI | 78,4% improvement | 18 residuals; 2 recurrences | No complications noted |
| Chen [ | 2011 | Surgical series EDS, focused on anesthesia | 123 | IL | VAS and ODI | Significant improvements in both groups | 3 | 1 dural tear |
| Dezawa [ | 2011 | Surgical series EDS, focused on technique | 30 | IL | — | Significant improvement | 1 persistent radiculopathy | — |
| Garg [ | 2011 | Comparison between EDS and MD | 112 | TF | ODI | Statistically significant pain relief in both groups | 1 | EDS, 5 dural tears |
| Doi [ | 2011 | Surgical series EDS | 17 | TF and IL | JOA | 16 pts. significant improvement | 3 | No complications noted |
| Casal-Moro [ | 2011 | Surgical series EDS | 120 | TF and IL | VAS and ODI | 92% good to excellent OC | 7,5% redo surgery | 4,1% dural tear; 4 nerve root injuries; 1 DVT; 1 discitis |
| Wang [ | 2011 | Surgical series EDS, analysis of learning curve | 30 | IL | VAS | Significant improvement | 20% converted to open | 12 to 10%, depending on the group |
| Lee et al. [ | 2010 | Surgical series EDS | 25 | TF | VAS and ODI | Significant improvement | 1 residual; 1 recurrence | No complications noted |
| Ahn [ | 2010 | Surgical series EDS, focused on annuloplasty and LBP improvement | 87 | TF | VAS, ODI, and MacNab | 72% good to excellent OC | 13 converted to open | No complications noted |
| Jhala and Mistry [ | 2010 | Surgical series EDS | 100 | IL | MacNab | 91% good to excellent OC | 4 | 4 discitis cases; 1 nerve root damage |
| Teli [ | 2010 | Comparison between EDS and MD, focused on complications | 224 | — | VAS, ODI, and SF-36 | Higher rate of complications in EDS group | 8 | 6 dural tears; 2 nerve injuries; 1 discitis |
| Peng [ | 2010 | Surgical series EDS | 55 | — | VAS, NASS, and SF-36 | Significant improvement | 5% | — |
| Lee [ | 2009 | Comparison between EDS and MD | 54—25 EDS, 29 MD | TF | VAS and ODI | Significant improvement in both groups, but reduction in hospital staying and recurrence rate in EDS group | 1 EDS persistent pain; 4% | 1 unspecified complication |
| Chae [ | 2009 | Surgical series EDS, analysis of technique | 153 | TF | VAS and MacNab | 94% excellent to good OC | Not reported | 1 paravertebral hematoma; 3 transient pareses; 8 transient hypoesthesia cases |
| Zhou [ | 2009 | Surgical series EDS | 275 | TF | MacNab | 91% good to excellent OC | 5 | 5 dural tears; 3 infections |