Literature DB >> 33819933

The Beneficial Effect of Early Surgical Decompression for Acute Spinal Cord Injury: Time Is Spine.

Ali Moghaddamjou1,2, Michael G Fehlings1,2,3.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 33819933      PMCID: PMC8021825          DOI: 10.14245/ns.2142256.128

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurospine        ISSN: 2586-6591


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The article by our team (Badhiwala et al. [1]) on the impact of early decompression in traumatic spinal cord injury (tSCI) addresses a topic of great interest in the field of tSCI. Without a well accepted, validated neuroprotective agent, decompressive/reconstructive surgery, and hemodynamic interventions remain the main evidence-based treatment options for the management of acute tSCI as summarized by the most recent clinical practice guidelines from the AO Spine group [2]. However, the evidence for early decompressive surgery (< 24 hours) is mixed and the guidelines provided only conditional recommendations, at the option level, in favor of early decompressive surgery. In our Lancet Neurology publication, our team used an accrued dataset of 1,548 patients from four independent multicentre, prospective data sources aimed to provide strong, quantitative evidence on the efficacy of early decompressive surgery for tSCI. The results conclude surgical decompression within 24 hours is associated with better sensorimotor recovery, with the beneficial impact appearing to plateau at 36 hours. We did extensive sensitivity testing which demonstrated the robustness of the analyses. This study thus provides the strongest evidence for the efficacy of early surgery for the treatment of tSCI. In our view, this paper, coupled with previous evidence, settles the debate on the efficacy of early surgery for the treatment of tSCI. Trauma medical systems and centers treating tSCI need to ensure that they can facilitate early decompressive surgery for tSCI. The central dogma for the treatment of ischemic stroke has been that “time is brain,” and this has been used to make institutional and systems-based changes to accommodate early treatment. The same thing can now be said for the spine, “time is spine” and centers need to leverage the available evidence and advocate for institutional resources required for early transfer and treatment of tSCI patients. While the results of the paper show efficacy for early decompression, further work is required to quantify the benefits in motor complete patients. Of particular importance are the motor and sensory complete patients (American Spinal Cord Injury Association Impairment Scale [AIS] A) who are the group with arguably the highest potential for improvement and the greatest medical need for effective and timely intervention. Historically, a sense of pessimism often surrounded the potential for AIS A patients to recover; however, recent data suggest that these patients have higher than expected spontaneous recovery rates [3]. In Fig. 1 and S1, Badhiwala et al. [1] demonstrate that motor complete patients undergoing early surgery have higher portions of grade conversion. While AIS conversions have been proposed as a surrogate for recovery [4], in the absence of a minimally clinically important difference in tSCI [5], one has to be cautious in the interpretation of conversions. For example, recovering sensation (AIS A to B) may not be as beneficial to a patient as improving their neurological level of injury and regaining hand function. Quantifying a meaningful therapeutic impact on the recovery of motor complete patients could further justify aggressive surgical and medical treatment in this group of patients. The challenge lies in defining novel outcome measures unique to motor complete patients. The primary endpoints in this study achieved the goal of demonstrating efficacy in the tSCI population, but separate endpoints unique to motor complete patients could provide further clarity to the role of early decompression in recovery. One approach is to analyze changes in neurological motor levels as opposed to the total motor or sensory scores. This method poses challenges as one must account for the complex ordinal nature of the neurological injury level and account for missing thoracic myotomes. Several unanswered questions remain in the context of surgical management of tSCI. These include (1) establishing what constitutes an adequate decompression [6], (2) the potential role of duroplasty to facilitate cord decompression [7], (3) the role of early surgery in patients with mild (AIS D) traumatic central cord injury [8], and (4) the role of local intrathecal CSF catheters to measure intraspinal pressures to guide efforts to enhance cord perfusion [9]. With recent advancements in disease modeling in the era of personalized medicine and machine learning, defining new outcome measures for motor complete patients should be a priority. This would then shed further light on the beneficial impact of early aggressive treatment for motor complete patients. In addition, the opportunity exists for a systems approach to facilitate “time is spine” and to undertake further translational research to enhance the early surgical management oft SCI.
  9 in total

1.  The influence of timing of surgical decompression for acute spinal cord injury: a pooled analysis of individual patient data.

Authors:  Jetan H Badhiwala; Jefferson R Wilson; Christopher D Witiw; James S Harrop; Alexander R Vaccaro; Bizhan Aarabi; Robert G Grossman; Fred H Geisler; Michael G Fehlings
Journal:  Lancet Neurol       Date:  2020-12-21       Impact factor: 44.182

2.  The natural history of complete spinal cord injury: a pooled analysis of 1162 patients and a meta-analysis of modern data.

Authors:  Najib E El Tecle; Nader S Dahdaleh; Mohamad Bydon; Wilson Z Ray; James C Torner; Patrick W Hitchon
Journal:  J Neurosurg Spine       Date:  2018-01-19

3.  Cerebrospinal Fluid Biomarkers To Stratify Injury Severity and Predict Outcome in Human Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury.

Authors:  Brian K Kwon; Femke Streijger; Nader Fallah; Vanessa K Noonan; Lise M Bélanger; Leanna Ritchie; Scott J Paquette; Tamir Ailon; Michael C Boyd; John Street; Charles G Fisher; Marcel F Dvorak
Journal:  J Neurotrauma       Date:  2016-08-15       Impact factor: 5.269

4.  ASIA impairment scale conversion in traumatic SCI: is it related with the ability to walk? A descriptive comparison with functional ambulation outcome measures in 273 patients.

Authors:  J J van Middendorp; A J F Hosman; M H Pouw; H Van de Meent
Journal:  Spinal Cord       Date:  2008-12-23       Impact factor: 2.772

Review 5.  Challenges for defining minimal clinically important difference (MCID) after spinal cord injury.

Authors:  X Wu; J Liu; L G Tanadini; D P Lammertse; A R Blight; John L K Kramer; G Scivoletto; L Jones; S Kirshblum; R Abel; J Fawcett; E Field-Fote; J Guest; B Levinson; D Maier; K Tansey; N Weidner; W G Tetzlaff; T Hothorn; A Curt; J D Steeves
Journal:  Spinal Cord       Date:  2014-12-16       Impact factor: 2.772

6.  Expansion duroplasty improves intraspinal pressure, spinal cord perfusion pressure, and vascular pressure reactivity index in patients with traumatic spinal cord injury: injured spinal cord pressure evaluation study.

Authors:  Isaac Phang; Melissa C Werndle; Samira Saadoun; Georgios Varsos; Marek Czosnyka; Argyro Zoumprouli; Marios C Papadopoulos
Journal:  J Neurotrauma       Date:  2015-05-04       Impact factor: 5.269

7.  A Clinical Practice Guideline for the Management of Patients With Acute Spinal Cord Injury and Central Cord Syndrome: Recommendations on the Timing (≤24 Hours Versus >24 Hours) of Decompressive Surgery.

Authors:  Michael G Fehlings; Lindsay A Tetreault; Jefferson R Wilson; Bizhan Aarabi; Paul Anderson; Paul M Arnold; Darrel S Brodke; Anthony S Burns; Kazuhiro Chiba; Joseph R Dettori; Julio C Furlan; Gregory Hawryluk; Langston T Holly; Susan Howley; Tara Jeji; Sukhvinder Kalsi-Ryan; Mark Kotter; Shekar Kurpad; Ralph J Marino; Allan R Martin; Eric Massicotte; Geno Merli; James W Middleton; Hiroaki Nakashima; Narihito Nagoshi; Katherine Palmieri; Anoushka Singh; Andrea C Skelly; Eve C Tsai; Alexander Vaccaro; Albert Yee; James S Harrop
Journal:  Global Spine J       Date:  2017-09-05

8.  Management of Acute Traumatic Central Cord Syndrome: A Narrative Review.

Authors:  Srikanth N Divi; Gregory D Schroeder; John J Mangan; Madeline Tadley; Wyatt L Ramey; Jetan H Badhiwala; Michael G Fehlings; F Cumhur Oner; Frank Kandziora; Lorin M Benneker; Emiliano N Vialle; Shanmuganathan Rajasekaran; Jens R Chapman; Alexander R Vaccaro
Journal:  Global Spine J       Date:  2019-05-08

9.  Extent of Spinal Cord Decompression in Motor Complete (American Spinal Injury Association Impairment Scale Grades A and B) Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury Patients: Post-Operative Magnetic Resonance Imaging Analysis of Standard Operative Approaches.

Authors:  Bizhan Aarabi; Joshua Olexa; Timothy Chryssikos; Samuel M Galvagno; David S Hersh; Aaron Wessell; Charles Sansur; Gary Schwartzbauer; Kenneth Crandall; Kathirkamanathan Shanmuganathan; J Marc Simard; Harry Mushlin; Mathew Kole; Elizabeth Le; Nathan Pratt; Gregory Cannarsa; Cara D Lomangino; Maureen Scarboro; Carla Aresco; Brian Curry
Journal:  J Neurotrauma       Date:  2018-10-09       Impact factor: 5.269

  9 in total
  1 in total

1.  Established and Emerging Therapies in Acute Spinal Cord Injury.

Authors:  Ron Gadot; David N Smith; Marc Prablek; Joey K Grochmal; Alfonso Fuentes; Alexander E Ropper
Journal:  Neurospine       Date:  2022-06-30
  1 in total

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