| Literature DB >> 31310155 |
Bizhan Aarabi1,2, Noori Akhtar-Danesh3, Timothy Chryssikos1, Kathirkamanathan Shanmuganathan2, Gary T Schwartzbauer1,2, J Marc Simard1, Joshua Olexa1, Charles A Sansur1, Kenneth M Crandall1, Harry Mushlin1, Matthew J Kole1, Elizabeth J Le1, Aaron P Wessell1, Nathan Pratt1, Gregory Cannarsa1, Cara Lomangino2, Maureen Scarboro2, Carla Aresco2, Jeffrey Oliver1, Nicholas Caffes1, Stephen Carbine1, Kanami Mori1.
Abstract
In cervical traumatic spinal cord injury (TSCI), the therapeutic effect of timing of surgery on neurological recovery remains uncertain. Additionally, the relationship between extent of decompression, imaging biomarker evidence of injury severity, and outcome is incompletely understood. We investigated the effect of timing of decompression on long-term neurological outcome in patients with complete spinal cord decompression confirmed on postoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) Impairment Scale (AIS) grade conversion was determined in 72 AIS grades A, B, and C patients 6 months after confirmed decompression. Thirty-two patients underwent decompressive surgery ultra-early (< 12 h), 25 underwent decompressive surgery early (12-24 h), and 15 underwent decompressive surgery late (> 24-138.5 h) after injury. Age, gender, injury mechanism, intramedullary lesion length (IMLL) on MRI, admission ASIA motor score, and surgical technique were not statistically different among groups. Motor complete patients (p = 0.009) and those with fracture dislocations (p = 0.01) tended to be operated on earlier. Improvement of one grade or more was present in 55.6% of AIS grade A, 60.9% of AIS grade B, and 86.4% of AIS grade C patients. Admission AIS motor score (p = 0.0004) and pre-operative IMLL (p = 0.00001) were the strongest predictors of neurological outcome. AIS grade improvement occurred in 65.6%, 60%, and 80% of patients who underwent decompression ultra-early, early, and late, respectively (p = 0.424). Multiple regression analysis revealed that IMLL was the only significant variable predictive of AIS grade conversion to a better grade (odds ratio, 0.908; confidence interval [CI], 0.862-0.957; p < 0.001). We conclude that in patients with post-operative MRI confirmation of complete decompression following cervical TSCI, pre-operative IMLL, not the timing of surgery, determines long-term neurological outcome.Entities:
Keywords: MRI; SCI; decompression; outcome; timing of surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31310155 PMCID: PMC6978784 DOI: 10.1089/neu.2019.6606
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurotrauma ISSN: 0897-7151 Impact factor: 5.269
Baseline Characteristics of the Present Cohort
| Category | <12 h post-trauma | 12-24 h post-trauma | 24-138.5 h post-trauma | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accident (%) | 0.59 | ||||
| Fall | 14 (38.9) | 14 (38.9) | 8 (22.2) | 36 (50) | |
| MVC | 12 (60) | 5 (25) | 3 (15) | 20 (27.8) | |
| Other | 6 (37.5) | 6 (37.5) | 4 (25) | 16 (2.2) | |
| Total | 32 (44.4) | 25 (34.7) | 15 (20.8) | 72 (100) | |
| Gender (%) | 0.89 | ||||
| Male | 26 (43.3) | 21 (35) | 13 (21.7) | 60 (83.3) | |
| Female | 6 (50) | 4 (33.3) | 2 (16.7) | 12 (16.7) | |
| Total | 32 (44.5) | 25 (34.7) | 15 (20.8) | 72 (100) | |
| Age (years): Mean (SD) | 41.8 (18.4) | 49.4 (18.3) | 49.3 (13.2) | 46.0 (17.6) | 0.19 |
| AIS grade (%) | 0.009 | ||||
| AIS A | 13 (48.2) | 11 (40.7) | 3 (11.1) | 27 (37.5) | |
| AIS B | 14 (60.9) | 7 (30.4) | 2 (8.7) | 23 (31.9) | |
| AIS C | 5 (22.7) | 7 (31.8) | 10 (45.5) | 22 (30.6) | |
| ASIA motor score: Mean (SD) | 18.6 (14.4) | 22.0 (15.2) | 24.5 (14.2) | 21.1 (14.6) | 0.40 |
| Morphology (%) | 0.01 | ||||
| A0 | 5 (20) | 12 (48) | 8 (32) | 25 (34.7) | |
| A3/A4/C | 24 (61.5) | 11 (28.2) | 4 (10.3) | 39 (54.2) | |
| B2/B3 | 3 (37.5) | 2 (25) | 3 (37.5) | 8 (11.1) | |
| Total | 32 (44.5) | 25 (34.7) | 15 (20.8) | 72 (100) | |
| IMLL (mm): Mean (SD) | 43.3 (19.5) | 37.5 (17.9) | 30.6 (13.9) | 38.6 (18.4) | 0.07 |
| Surgical technique (%) | 0.32 | ||||
| ACDF | 5 (50) | 2 (20) | 3 (30) | 10 (13.9) | |
| ACDF+Laminectomy | 10 (40) | 11 (44) | 4 (16) | 25 (34.7) | |
| ACCF | 7 (77.8) | 2 (22.2) | 0 (0) | 9 (12.5) | |
| ACCF+Laminectomy | 5 (45.4) | 4 (36.4) | 2 (18.2) | 11 (15.3) | |
| Laminectomy | 5 (29.4) | 6 (35.3) | 6 (35.3) | 17 (23.6) | |
| Total | 32 (44.4) | 25 (34.7) | 15 (20.8) | 72 (100) |
MVC, motor vehicle crash; SD, standard deviation; AIS, American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) Impairment Scale; IMLL, intramedullary lesion length; ACDF, anterior cervical discectomy and fusion; ACCF, anterior cervical corpectomy and fusion.
FIG. 1.(A–D) Midsagittal computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of a 19-year-old man involved in an automobile accident who was admitted 30 min later to the trauma resuscitation unit (TRU) with a C5 compression tear-drop fracture (arrow); American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) motor score of 21, and ASIA Impairment Scale (AIS) grade B; intramedullary lesion length (IMLL) at admission was 27.8 mm. A C5 corpectomy was performed 6 h after the accident, which completely decompressed the spinal cord. MRI 34.5 h after surgery indicated an IMLL of 34.4 mm. One year following the accident, his ASIA motor score was 64 and he was AIS grade D. (E–H) Midsagittal CT and MRI of a 42-year-old man who had a mechanical fall and was admitted 30 min later to the TRU with from spinal stenosis and possible extension injury (arrow); ASIA motor score was 8 and AIS grade was A; IMLL at admission was 42.2 mm. He underwent C4 corpectomy and C3–C5 laminectomy with fusion 13 h after the accident, with complete spinal cord decompression. MRI 23 h after surgery indicated an IMLL of 30.9 mm. Six months following the accident, his ASIA motor score remained 8 and he was AIS grade A. (I–L) Midsagittal CT and MRI of a 53-year-old man who had a mechanical fall and was admitted 10.5 h later to the TRU with a C3/4 extension injury (arrow); ASIA motor score was 33 and AIS grade was C; IMLL at admission was 20.3 mm. He underwent discectomy and fusion at C3/4, 36 h after the accident, with complete spinal cord decompression. MRI 49.8 h after surgery indicated an IMLL of 49.6 mm. Fifty-seven months following the accident, his ASIA motor score was 91 and he was AIS grade D.
Investigations Evaluating the Timing of Decompression on the Therapeutic Effectiveness and Neurological Outcome in Cervical Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury
| Investigator | Design | Cohort | AIS grade | Preop MRI | Timing (hours) | Postop MRI | IMLL | Extent of DEC. | F/UM | TE/AIS grade conversion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vaccaro et al. | PR | 62 | A-D | Yes | ≤72 and >120 | No | No | No | 11.5 | No effect |
| Guest et al. | RO | 50 | C-D | Yes | ≤24 and >24 | No | No | No | 36 | Not |
| Papadopoulos et al. J. Trauma 2002 | PO | 91 | A-D | Yes | <12 and >12 | No | No | No | 33 | Early superior |
| Sapkas and Papadakis J. Orthop. Surg. 2007 | RO | 67 | A-E | Yes | ≤72 and >72 | No | No | No | 48 | No effect |
| Lenehan et al. Spine 2010 | PO | 73 | C-D | Yes | ≤24 and >24 | No | No | No | 12 | No effect |
| Wilson et al. Spinal Cord 2012 | PO | 55 | A-D | Yes | <24 and ≥24 | No | No | No | 3 | Early superior |
| Fehlings et al. PLoS One 2012 | PO | 313 | A-D | Yes | <24 and ≥24 | No | No | No | 6 | Early superior |
| Jug et al. J. Neurotrauma 2015 | PO | 42 | A-C | Yes | ≤8 and 8-24 | No | No | No | 6 | Early superior |
| Dvorak et al. J. Neurotrauma 2015 | PO | 470 | A-D | Yes? | ≤24 and >24 | No | No | No | 3-6 | NM |
| Grassner et al. J. Neurotrauma 2016 | RO | 70 | A-D | Yes | ≤8 and 8-90 | No | No | No | 10 | Early superior |
| Bourassa-Moreau et al. J. Neurotrauma 2016 | PO | 20 | A | Yes | <24-≥24 | No | No | No | 5 | Early |
| Mattiassich et al. J. Neurotrauma 2017 | RO | 49 | A-D | Yes | <5 h and ≥5-24 | No | No | No | 6 | Late superior |
| Burke et al. | RO | 48 | A-D | Yes | ≤12,12-24,>24 | No | No | No | ACD | Early |
| Kim et al. World Neurosurg. 2018 | RO | 46 | A-D | Yes | ≤48 and >48 | No | No | No | 6 | No effect |
| Sewell et al. World Neurosurg. 2018 | RO | 95 | A-D | Yes | ≤24 and >24 | No | No | No | 6 | No effect |
| Current Study | RO | 73 | A-C | Yes | ≤12,12-24,24-138.5 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 6 | No effect |
AIS, American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) Impairment Scale; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; IMLL, intramedullary lesion length; ACD, acute care discharge; DEC, decompression; F/U, follow-up; M, months; PO, prospective observational; PR, prospective randomized; RO, retrospective observational; TE, treatment effect.
Multivariate Regression Analysis Comparing the Therapeutic Efficacy of Timing of Surgery Versus Intramedullary Lesion Length (IMLL)
| Outcome | Odds ratio | 95% confidence interval | |
|---|---|---|---|
| <12 h trauma-surgery | Referent | - | - |
| 12-24 h trauma-surgery | 0.455 | 0.118-1.752 | 0.25 |
| >24 h trauma-surgery | 0.832 | 0.141-4.88 | 0.83 |
| IMLL (mm) | 0.908 | 0.862-0.957 | 0.001 |
AIS Grade Conversion in 32 Patients with Ultra-Early (< 12 h) Decompression
AIS grade regression.
AIS, American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) Impairment Scale.
AIS Grade Conversion in 25 Patients with Early (12-24 h) Decompression
AIS grade regression.
AIS, American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) Impairment Scale.
AIS Grade Conversion in 15 Patients with Late (>24-138.5 h) Decompression
| AIS grade at follow-up | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Admission AIS grade | A | B | C | D | E | Total admission |
| AIS grade | ||||||
| A | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 3 |
| B | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| C | 0 | 0 | 1 | 9 | 0 | 10 |
AIS, American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) Impairment Scale.
AIS Grade Conversion in Various Categories of the Cohort
| Category | AIS not converted | AIS converted | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accident (%) | 0.638 | |||
| Fall | 12 (33.3) | 24 (66.7) | 36 (50) | |
| MVC | 8 (40) | 12 (60) | 20 (27.8) | |
| Other | 4 (25) | 12 (75) | 16 (22.2) | |
| Total | 24 (33.3) | 48 (66.7) | 72 (100) | |
| Gender (%) | 0.18 | |||
| Male | 22 (36.7) | 38 (63.3) | 60 (83.3) | |
| Female | 2 (16.7) | 10 (83.3) | 12 (16.7) | |
| Age (SD) | 40.8 (16.2) | 48.6 (17.9) | 46.0 (17.6) | 0.07 |
| Admission AIS grade (%) | 0.058 | |||
| A | 12 (44.4) | 15 (55.6) | 27 (37.5) | |
| B | 9 (39.1) | 14 (60.9) | 23 (31.9) | |
| C | 3 (13.6) | 19 (86.4) | 22 (30.6) | |
| Total | 24 (33.3) | 48 (66.7) | 72 (100) | |
| Admission ASIA motor score (SD) | 12.7 (12.5) | 25.2 (13.9) | 21.0 (14.6) | 0.0004 |
| Morphology (%) | 0.11 | |||
| A0 (No evidence of fracture dislocation) | 6 (24) | 19 (76) | 25 (34.7) | |
| B2 or B3 (Flexion or extension injury) | 1 (12.5) | 7 (87.5) | 8 (11.1) | |
| A3/4+C (Significant translation in X/Y/Z axes) | 17 (43.6) | 22 (56.4) | 39 (54.2) | |
| Intramedullary lesion length (IMLL) (mm, SD) | ||||
| Admission grade A | 59.3 (20.7) | 35.6 (9.6) | 46.1 (19.4) | 0.002 |
| Admission grade B | 54.2 (19.1) | 31.9 (11.9) | 40.6 (18.4) | 0.003 |
| Admission grade C | 23.9 (17.1) | 27.9 (9.9) | 27.4 (10.6) | 0.472 |
| Total | 53.0 (22.1) | 31.5 (10.7) | 38.6 (18.4) | 0.00001 |
| Surgical intervention (%) | NS | |||
| ACDF | 3 (30) | 7 (70) | 10 (13.9) | |
| ACDF+Laminectomy | 5 (20) | 20 (80) | 25 (34.7) | |
| ACCF | 1 (11.1) | 8 (88.9) | 9 (12.5) | |
| ACCF+Laminectomy | 9(81.8) | 2 (18.2) | 11 (15.3) | |
| Laminectomy | 6 (35.3) | 11 (64.7) | 17 (23.6) | |
| Timing of surgery (%) | 0.424 | |||
| <12 h after trauma | 11 (34.4) | 21 (65.6) | 32 (44.5) | |
| 12-24 h after trauma | 10 (40) | 15 (60) | 25 (34.7) | |
| >24 h after trauma | 3 (20) | 12 (80) | 15 (20.8) | |
| Total | 24 (33.3) | 48 (66.7) | 72 (100) |
AIS, American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) Impairment Scale; MVC, motor vehicle crash; SD, standard deviation; ACDF, anterior cervical discectomy and fusion; ACCF, anterior cervical corpectomy and fusion.