| Literature DB >> 28655308 |
Xuan Wang1, Benny Borgman2, Simona Vertuani3, Jonas Nilsson3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic low back pain is a common health problem for adult workers and causes an enormous economic burden. With the improvement of minimally invasive surgical techniques (MIS) in spinal fusion and the development of fusion devices, more lumbar operations are today being performed through a less invasive technique. When compared with open surgeries (OS), MIS has demonstrated better clinical outcomes including operation time, blood loss, complication rates and length of hospital stay. The aim of this review was to identify and summarize evidence on the time to return to work and the duration of post-operation narcotic use for patients who had lumbar spinal fusion operations using MIS and OS techniques.Entities:
Keywords: Anterior lumbar interbody fusion; Lumbar spinal fusion; Minimal invasive surgery; Narcotic use; Open surgery; Posterior lumbar interbody fusion; Posterolateral fusion; Return to work; Systematic literature review; Transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28655308 PMCID: PMC5488344 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-017-2398-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Flowchart detailing the review process
Fig. 2Surgical procedures performed in the studies included in the review. “360 procedure”: Posterolateral fusion plus internal fixation with the variable screw placement device plus interbody fusion; ALIF: Anterior Lumbar Interbody Fusion; MIS: Minimal Invasive Surgery; OS: Open Surgery; PLF: Posterolateral Fusion; PLIF: Posterior Lumbar Interbody Fusion; TLIF: Transforaminal Lumbar Interbody Fusion
Fig. 3Quality assessment of the included studies. ++ All or most of the criteria have been fulfilled. Where they have not been fulfilled the conclusions of the study or review are thought very unlikely to alter. + Some of the criteria have been fulfilled. Those criteria that have not been fulfilled or not adequately described are thought unlikely to alter the conclusions. - Few or no criteria fulfilled. The conclusions of the study are thought likely or very likely to alter
Results on time to return to work and rate of return to work
| Study | Country | Number of patients (Technique) | Fusion levels | Follow up | Time to return to work Mean (weeks) | Return to work Rate (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MIS | OPEN | MIS | OPEN | |||||
|
| ||||||||
| Adogwa et al. (2011) [ | US | 15 (MIS-TLIF)15 (OS-TLIF) | 1-level | 2 years | Median: 8.5 [IQR: 4.4–21.4] | Median: 17.1 [IQR: 1.7–35.9] | At 2 years: ~90% | At 2 years: ~80% |
| Kim et al. (2010a) [ | South Korea | 43 (MIS-ALIF) 32 (OS-ICF) | NR | 41.1 months (MIS) 32.9 months (OS) | ~14.8 (fulltime work) | ~14.4 (fulltime work) | - | - |
| Parker et al. (2012) [ | US | 15 (MIS-TLIF)15 (OS-TLIF) | 1-level | 2 years | 8.3 | 16.3 |
|
|
| Parker et al. (2013) [ | US | 50 (MIS-TLIF) 50 (OS-TLIF) | 1-level | 2 years | Median: 7 [4–11] | Median: 11 [9–16] | At 6 months: ~95% | At 9 months: ~80% |
|
| ||||||||
| Eckman et al. (2012)a [ | NR | 606 (MIS-TLIF) | 1 | NR | - | - | 96% | - |
| Eckman et al. (2014) [ | US | 1005 (MIS-TLIF) | 1- or 2-level | 3 months | - | - | 96% of procedures (same-day discharge group)93% of procedures (hospital stay group) | - |
| Kim et al. (2009) [ | South Korea | 48 (MIS-ALIF) 46 (MIS-TLIF) | NR | 32.6 months (ALIF) 29.7 months (TLIF) | 6.1 months (ALIF)10.9 months (TLIF) | - | - | - |
| Rouben et al. (2011) [ | US | 169 (MIS-TLIF) | 1-level (124)2-level (45) | 49 months | 11 weeks (for 97% RTW right after surgery)17 weeks (for 57% compensation workers) | - | 97% RTW right after surgery 57% compensation workers RTW | - |
| Kim et al. (2010b) [ | South Korea | 63 (MIS-ALIF) | NR | 6 years | - | - | 83% | - |
| Kim et al. (2012) [ | South Korea | 44 (MIS-ALIF) | 1-level | 71.8 months (DS) 66.4 months (IS) | - | - | 91% | - |
| Zeilstra et al. (2013) [ | US | 131 (MIS-AxiaLIF) | 1-level | 21.8 months | - | - | 64%44% (for fulltime workers) | - |
|
| ||||||||
| Berg et al. (2009) [ | Sweden | 72 (OS-PLF/PLIF) | 1-level (33) | 2 years | - | - | - | 72.0% |
| Corenman et al. (2013) [ | NR | 36 (OS-TLIF) | 1-level (24)2-level (12) | 41.9 months | - | - | - | 84.4% |
| Fritzell et al. (2004) [ | Sweden | 72 (OS-PLF) 71 (OS-VSP)74 (OS-"360”) | NR | 2 years | - | - | - | 33% |
| Gornet et al. (2011) [ | US | 172 (OS-ALIF) | 1-level | 2 years | - | 96 days | - | - |
| Robertson et al. (2004) [ | New Zealand | 35 (OS-PLF) | 1-level (12)2-level (16) | 31 months | - | 3–50 months | - | 100% |
| Takahashi et al. (2011) [ | Japan | 21 (OS-TLIF) | 1-level (18)2-level (3) | 26.1 months | - | - | - | 90% after 3.9 months |
“360 procedure”: Posterolateral fusion plus internalfixation with the variable screw placement device plus interbody fusion; ALIF: Anterior Lumbar Interbody Fusion; AxiaLIF: Axial Lumbar Interbody Fusion; DS: Degenerative Spondylolisthesis; ICF: Instrumented Circumferential Fusion; IQR: InterQuartile Range; MIS: Minimal Invasive Surgery; NR: Not Reported; OS: Open Surgery; PLF: PosteroLateral Fusion; PLIF: Posterior Lumbar Interbody Fusion; PSG: Prior Surgery Group; RTW: Return To Work; TLIF: Transforaminal Lumbar Interbody Fusion; VSP: Posterolateral fusion plus internal fixation with the variable screw placement device
aPublished as abstract
Fig. 4Proportion of patients return to normal activities or full function. *Results of proportion of patients return to full function in Lee et al. (2011) [43]. ALIF: Anterior Lumbar Interbody Fusion; MIS: Minimally Invasive Surgery; OS: Open Surgery; TLIF: Transforaminal Lumbar Interbody Fusion
Fig. 5Duration of post-operation narcotic use (MIS vs. OS)