| Literature DB >> 29164032 |
Lindsay A Tetreault1,2, John Rhee3, Heidi Prather4, Brian K Kwon5, Jefferson R Wilson6, Allan R Martin1, Ian B Andersson7, Anna H Dembek7, Krystle T Pagarigan8, Joseph R Dettori8, Michael G Fehlings1,6.
Abstract
STUDYEntities:
Keywords: cervical spondylotic myelopathy; degenerative cervical myelopathy; nonoperative treatment; systematic review
Year: 2017 PMID: 29164032 PMCID: PMC5684835 DOI: 10.1177/2192568217700397
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Spine J ISSN: 2192-5682
PICO Table.
| Inclusion | Exclusion | |
|---|---|---|
| Patient | Clinical questions 1-4: Adult patients (≥18 years) with myelopathy due to spondylosis, herniated disc, and/or ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament. |
Patients <18 years of age Myelopathy due to infection, malignancy, acute injury, inflammatory arthritis, or trauma |
| Intervention | Clinical questions 1-4: Therapeutic exercise Manual therapy Bracing Cervical traction Other nonoperative treatments |
Surgical intervention |
| Comparison | Clinical question 2: Competing nonoperative intervention | |
| Outcomes | Clinical questions 1-4: Quality of life (SF-36) Disability (NDI) Pain (VAS) Functional status (JOA, Nurick) Conversion to surgery | |
| Study design | Clinical question 2: RCT Cohort studies Clinical questions 1, 3, 4: Case series |
Case reports Literature review Narrative review Animal studies Studies with <10 patients |
Abbreviations: SF-36, Short-Form 36; NDI, Neck Disability Index; VAS, Visual Analog Scale; JOA, Japanese Orthopaedic Association; RCT, randomized controlled trials.
Figure 1.Results of literature search.
Characteristics of Studies.
| Author(Years)/Study Design | Patient Characteristics | Condition, Severity, Duration | Intervention | Outcome Measures | Mean Follow-up (Range); % Follow-up | Risk of Bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fukui et al (1990)[ | N = 50a | Condition: DCM from dynamic canal stenosis | Continuous cervical traction | JOA score | 2.5 years; % NR | High risk |
| Mean age: 58.6 years | Baseline JOA: 11.1 | 2 weeks (n = 50) | Conversion to surgery | |||
| 79% male | Mean Sx duration: 2.92 years; range = 1 month to 10 years | |||||
| Kadanka et al (2002, 2011)[ | N = 35 | Condition: DCM | Intermittent cervical bracing with soft collar (n = NR) | mJOA score | 12 months; % NR | Moderately high risk |
| Mean age: 54 years | Baseline mJOA: 14.6 | NSAIDs (n = NR) | 10-m walking test | 24 months; % NR | ||
| 74.3% male | Median Sx duration: 1 year; range = 0.3 to 6 years | Intermittent bed rest 2° to pain (n = NR) | ADL | 36 months; 83% | ||
| Subjective assessment | 120 months; 78% | |||||
| Kong et al (2013)[ | N = 90 | Condition: DCM | Continuous cervical traction | JOA score | 40 months (36-56 months); 87% | Low risk |
| Mean age: 57.8 years | Baseline JOA: 14.2 ± 1.0 | 8 hours/day for 2 weeks (Good-Samaritan) (n = 90) | Conversion to score | |||
| 58% male | Mean Sx duration: 20.3 months | |||||
| Li et al (2014)[ | N = 38c | Condition: CSM | Oral drugs (n = NR) | JOA score | 30.7 months; % NR | High risk |
| Mean age: 51.7 years | Baseline JOA: 14.4 | Traction (n = NR) | NDI | |||
| 52% male | Mean Sx duration: 5.97 ± 5.08 months | Acupuncture (n = NR) | ||||
| Physiotherapy (n = NR) | ||||||
| Other conservative treatments (n = NR) | ||||||
| Matsumoto et al (2001)[ | N = 27 | Condition: DCM from soft disc herniation | Cervical bracing 8 hours/day for 3 months (n = 17) | JOA score | 3.9 years (1-7 years); %NR | High risk |
| Mean age: 44.4 years | Baseline JOA: 13.8 ± 1.6 | Physical therapy with intermittent cervical traction (n = 4) | Conversion to surgery | |||
| 74% male | Mean Sx duration: 4.7 months | NSAIDs (n = 7) | ||||
| Nakamura et al (1998)[ | N = 64 | Condition: DCM | Continuous head halter traction (n = 2) | JOA score | 74 months (3-10 years); 83%d | Moderately high risk |
| Mean age: 52 years | Baseline JOA: NR | Cervical bracing (n = 19) | Conversion to surgery | |||
| 72% male | Mean Sx duration: 24 months; range = 1 month to 20 years | Plaster bed immobilization (n = 15) | ||||
| Crutchfield skull traction (n = 28) | ||||||
| Shimomura et al (2007)[ | N = 70 | Condition: DCM | Continuous cervical traction | JOA score | 35.6 months (10-60 months); 80% | Moderately low risk |
| Mean age: 55.1 years | Baseline JOA: 14.6 ± 1.3 | 8 hours/day for 2 weeks (Good-Samaritan) (n = 70) | ||||
| 54% male | Sx duration: NR | |||||
| Yoshimatsu et al (2001)[ | N = 57e | Condition: DCM | Continuous cervical traction | JOA score | 29 months (1-76 months); % NR | Moderately high risk |
| Mean age: 67 years | Baseline JOA: NR | 3-4 hours/day for 1-3 months (Good-Samaritan) (n = NR) | Conversion to surgery | |||
| 51% male | Mean Sx duration: 28.5 months | Immobilization (n = NR) | ||||
| Drug therapy (n = NR) | ||||||
| Exercise therapy (n = NR) | ||||||
| Thermal therapy (n = NR) |
Abbreviations: DCM, degenerative cervical myelopathy; CSM, cervical spondylotic myelopathy; JOA, Japanese Orthopaedic Association; NR, not reported; ADL, activities of daily living; NSAID, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug; NDI, Neck Disability Index; OPLL, ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament; RCT, randomized controlled trial; Sx, symptom.
aN = 53; 3 subjects refused conservative treatment.
bRCT by design; however, data extracted only from conservative arm (prospective cohort)
cN = 91; n = 38 in conservative arm.
dNineteen subjects converted to surgical treatment (11/19 had follow-up) and 34 continued with conservative treatment (34/34 had follow-up); a total of 53 subjects remained for final follow-up (83%).
eN = 101 conservative and surgical arms; 12 subjects in the original conservative arm (n = 69) refused treatment.
Change in (Modified) Japanese Orthopaedic Association Score Following Structured Nonoperative Treatment in Patients With DCM.
| JOAb | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author | N | Follow-up (Months) | Treatmenta | Baseline | Posttreatment | Difference |
| Kadanka et al (2002/2011)[ | 32 | 36, 120 | Immobilization | 14.6 | 14.7 | 0.1 |
| Li et al (2014)[ | 38 | 30.7 | Mixed | 14.4 | 15.5 | 1.1 |
| Matsumoto et al (2001)[ | 27 | 47 (12-84) | Mixed | 13.8 ± 1.6 | 16.1 ± 0.9 | 2.3 |
| Fukui et al (1990)[ | 50 | 30 | Traction | 11.1 | 12.8 | 1.7 |
| Shimomura et al (2007)[ | 70 | 35.6 (10-60) | Traction | 14.6 ± 1.3 | 14.7 ± 2.0 | 0.1 |
| Kong et al (2013)[ | 90 | 40 (36-56) | Traction | 14.2 ± 1.0 | 14.2 ± 1.3 | 0 |
Abbreviations: DCM, degenerative cervical myelopathy; JOA, Japanese Orthopaedic Association.
aSee Table 1 for treatment details.
bSeventeen-point JOA used in all studies except Kadanka et al, who used the 18-point modified JOA.
The Proportion of Patients With DCM Who Converted to Surgery Following Structured Nonoperative Treatment.
| Author | N | Follow-up (Months) | Treatmenta | Baseline JOA | n (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Matsumoto et al (2001)[ | 27 | 47 (12-84) | Mixed | 13.8 ± 1.6 | 10 (37%) |
| Fukui et al (1990)[ | 50 | 30 | Traction | 11.1 | 27 (54%) |
| Kong et al (2013)[ | 90 | 40 (36-56) | Traction | 14.2 ± 1.0 | 21 (23%) |
| Nakamura et al (1998)[ | 64 | 74 (36-129) | Mixed | NR | 19 (30%) |
| Yoshimatsu et al (2001)[ | 57 | 29 (1-76) | Mixed | NR | 22 (39%) |
Abbreviations: DCM, degenerative cervical myelopathy; JOA, Japanese Orthopaedic Association.
aSee Table 1 for treatment details.
GRADE Summary Table.
| Number of Studies (N) | Strength of Evidence | Conclusions | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| mJOA/JOA improvement | 4 prospective cohorts[ | Very Low | There were no clinically meaningful or statistically significant differences between mJOA/JOA scores at baseline and follow-up following structured nonoperative treatment for DCM. Evidence was inconsistent across studies: follow-up durations ranged from 30 to 74.0 months, baseline mJOA/JOA scores from 11.1 to 14.6 points, and change in scores following treatment from 0 to 2.3. One study reported improvement in JOA score in 26% of their patient population. |
| 4 retrospective cohorts[ | |||
|
| |||
| % of patients with JOA improvement | 1 retrospective cohort[ | Very Low | A single study reported on the proportion of patients who improved by ≥1 point on the JOA score following “rigorous” versus “nonrigorous” structured nonoperative treatment. |
|
| |||
| 38% versus 6% reported improvement in symptoms | |||
| 49% versus 78% experienced worsening of symptoms | |||
|
| |||
| Duration of symptoms: | Very Low | Two studies evaluated outcomes based on pretreatment duration of symptoms | |
|
| 1 prospective cohort[ | ≤3 months: 80% | |
| JOA: ≥1 point improvement | >3 months: 46%, | ||
|
| 1 retrospective cohort[ | <6 months: UE: 30%; LE: 36% | |
| UE JOA: any improvement | ≥6 months: UE: 26%; LE: 23%; | ||
| LE JOA: any improvement | |||
| Causative pathology: | |||
|
| 1 retrospective cohort (n = 27)[ | Very Low | Based on a single study, 63% of patients demonstrated improvement or stability on the JOA at final follow-up and 59% experienced spontaneous regression of their disc herniation. |
| JOA score | |||
|
| |||
| Surgery following nonoperative care | 2 prospective cohorts[ | Very Low | Across 5 studies, 23% to 54% of patients ultimately converted to surgery following an initial trial of structured nonoperative treatment. Pretreatment severity was mostly mild to moderate. |
| 3 retrospective cohorts[ | |||
Abbreviations: DCM, degenerative cervical myelopathy; JOA, Japanese Orthopaedic Association; mJOA, modified JOA; UE, upper extremity; LE, lower extremity.