| Literature DB >> 33915615 |
Kun-Tae Kim1,2, Myung-Geun Song2, Young-Jin Park2, Dong-Yeong Lee3, Dong-Hee Kim2.
Abstract
Posterior lumbar fusion is a safe and effective surgical method for diseases, such as lumbar stenosis, spondylolisthesis, lumbar instability, spinal deformity, and tumor. Pedicle screw (PS) fixation was first introduced by Bouche and has been adopted as the gold standard for posterior lumbar fusion. Santoni and colleagues introduced a new methodological screw insertion technique that uses a cortical bone trajectory (CBT), described as that from a medial to lateral path in the transverse axial plane and caudal to the cephalad path in the sagittal plane through the pedicle for maximum contact of the screw with the cortical bone. Owing to the lower invasiveness, superior cortical bone contact, and reduced neurovascular injury incidence, the CBT technique has been widely used in posterior lumbar fusion; however, these advantages have not been proven in clinical/radiological and biomechanical studies. We designed the present study to review the existing evidence and evaluate the merit of CBT screw fixation. Six electronic databases were searched for relevant articles published in August 2020 using the search terms "cortical bone trajectory," "CBT spine," "CBT fixation," "cortical pedicle screws," and "cortical screws." Studies were analyzed and divided into the following groups: "biomechanics investigation," "surgical technique," and "clinical/radiological studies." Most studies compared CBT and PS fixation, and the CBT screw fixation method showed better or similar outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Cortical bone trajectory; Cortical screw; Lumbar fusion; Pedicle screw; Pedicle screws
Year: 2021 PMID: 33915615 PMCID: PMC8873998 DOI: 10.31616/asj.2020.0575
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Asian Spine J ISSN: 1976-1902
Fig. 1Pedicle screw fixation (L4/5). (A, D) Entry point is cross line of lateral border of the superior articular facet and center of the transverse process. (B, E) Screw go through 15°–25° at transverse pedicle angle. (C, F) L4 and L5 sagittal pedicle angle is each 0°, 5°–10° caudally declined.
Fig. 2Cortical bone trajectory screw fixation (L4/5). (A, D) Starting point is junction of the center of the superior articular process and 1 mm inferior to the inferior border of the transverse process. (B, E) Screw go through pedicle at medio-lateral pathway in transverse plane. (C, F) 25°–30° caudocranial pathway in sagittal plane.
Characteristics of biomechanical studies
| Author (yr) | Design of study | Level of evidence | No. of subjects | Method | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Santoni et al. [ | Human cadaveric study | 4 | 14 Lumbar vertebral bodies (L1–L5) | Comparing CBT, PS screw fixation strength: pullout and toggle test | CBT screw fixation: uniaxial yield pullout load (30% higher than PS); pullout resistance, toggle test |
| Perez-Orribo et al. [ | Human cadaveric study | 4 | 28 Specimens | Comparing stability of CBT and PS | CBT screw fixation: stiffness, stability |
| Matsukawa et al. [ | 2 | 48 Patients | Comparing CBT, PS screw fixation strength: insertional torque measurement | CBT screw fixation: insertional torque (1.7 times higher than PS) | |
| Matsukawa et al. [ | Analysis of finite element model | 4 | 17 Patients (L4, L5 vertebral bodies) | Comparing CBT, PS screw fixation strength: measurement of axial pullout strength and applying flexion, extension, lateral bending, axial rotation force in spondylolytic vertebrae and normal vertebrae | CBT screw fixation strength in spondylolytic vertebrae: pullout strength |
| Sansur et al. [ | Human cadaveric study | 4 | 8 Specimens | Comparing CBT, PS screw fixation strength: fatigue testing (tensile load to failure pullout testing) | CBT screw fixation: increase in mean load at failure in lower vertebral segment |
| Matsukawa et al. [ | Analysis of finite element model | 2 | 20 Lumbar vertebral bodies | Simulation and testing of CBT screw fixation | Larger-diameter screws: increased pullout and vertebral fixation strength; decreased equivalent stress around screws |
| Li et al. [ | Human cadaveric study | 4 | 14 (31 lumbar vertebral bodies) | Comparing CBT, PS screw fixation strength: one side CBT, the other side PS screw fixation on vertebral body; measurement of maximal insertional torque, pullout and cyclic fatigue test was done. | CBT screw fixation: higher maximum insertional torque, axial pullout strength; higher failure load for displacing screw than PS screw fixation |
| Ninomiya et al. [ | Clinical study | 4 | 21 Patients | Comparing CBT, PS screw fixation in degenerative spondylolisthesis: measurement of lumbar lordosis, percent slippage | CBT screw fixation: pre- and postoperative slippage |
| Baluch et al. [ | Human cadaveric study | 4 | 17 Vertebral bodies | Comparing CBT, PS screw fixation strength: one side CBT, the other side PS screw fixation on vertebral body; measurement of resistance to toggle testing (by increasing cycling craniocaudal toggling) | CBT screw fixation: more resistance to craniocaudal toggling |
| Oshino et al. [ | Animal cadaveric study | 5 | 20 Lumbar vertebral bodies | Comparing CBT, PS screw fixation: measurement of ROM by bending and rotational force | CBT screw fixation: mean ROMs, intervertebral stability |
| Calvert et al. [ | Human cadaveric study | 4 | 10 Specimens (L3, L4) | Comparing CBT, PS screw fixation: test of pullout strength to fail and then salvaged with screws of the opposite trajectory | CBT screw and PS fixation each obtain proper construct stiffness and pullout strength when used for revision at the same level. → Both CBT screw and PS fixation may be used as rescue option in compromised screw construct in lumbar spine. |
| Matsukawa et al. [ | Analysis of finite element model | 4 | 30 Lumbar vertebral bodies (L4) | Comparing CBT, PS screw fixation strength: measurement of axial pullout, multidirectional loading. And then simulating flexion, extension, lateral bending, axial rotation of screw-vertebra construct | CBT screw fixation: stronger in pullout strength, stiffness in cephalocaudal and mediolateral loading; superior resistance to flexion and extension loading, inferior resistance to lateral bending and axial rotation in screw-vertebra construct |
CBT, cortical bone trajectory; PS, pedicle screw; ROM, range of motion.
No significant difference.
Outcomes of meta-analysis studies
| Variable | Zhang et al. [ | Wang et al. [ | Hu et al. [ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fusion rate | NSD | NSD | NSD |
| Back pain VAS | NSD | NSD | NSD |
| Leg pain VAS | NSD | NSD | NSD |
| JOA score | NSD | NSD | NSD |
| JOA recovery rate | NM | C | NM |
| Patients’ satisfaction | C | C | NM |
| Incidence of reoperation | NM | NSD | NM |
| Operation time | C | C | NM |
| Intraoperative blood loss | C | C | C |
| Length of hospital day | C | C | C |
| Incidence of complications | C | NM | NSD |
| ASD | C | C | NM |
| Oswestry Disability Index | C | C | NSD |
| Incidence of superior facet joint violation | NM | C | NM |
| Wound infection | NM | NSD | NM |
| Screw malposition | NM | NSD | NM |
| Incision length | NM | C | C |
NSD, no significant difference; VAS, Visual Analog Scale; JOA score, Japanese Orthopaedic Association score; NM, not mentioned; C, superior outcomes in cortical bone trajectory; ASD, adjacent segment degeneration.
Dural tear, screw dislocation, hematoma, wound infection, ASD, cage subsidence, and recurrent radiating pain of lower extremities.
Dural tear pedicle fracture, screw malposition, hematoma, wound infection, and ASD.
Fig. 3(A, B) Preoperative L-spine anterior-posterior (AP), lateral X-ray. (C, D) Postoperative L-spine AP, lateral X-ray. (E, F) Intraoperative X-ray. (G–I) Postoperative computed tomography.
Characteristics of clinical and radiological studies
| Author (year) | Design of study | Level of evidence | No. of patients | Mean age (yr) | Sex (male/female) | FU (mo) | Technique of fusion | Summary | ||||
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| CBT | PS | CBT | PS | CBT | PS | CBT | PS | |||||
| Chin et al. [ | Cohort | 4 | 30 | 30 | 48±3 | 62±3 | 18/12 | 15/15 | 24 | 24 | NM | Improvement in pain VAS, ODI in CBT group. Fusion rate at 2 years was similar between groups. |
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| Chen et al. [ | Cohort | 4 | 18 | 15 | 53.39±1.97 | 59.2±3.12 | 11/7 | 2/13 | 15 | 15 | NM | CBT group showed shorter length of hospital day and lesser postoperative pain VAS at 6–12 weeks. However, long-term postoperative pain VAS is higher in CBT group. |
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| Hoffman et al. [ | Cohort | 4 | 25 | 23 | 53.4 | 48.5 | 16 | 16 | 5.5 | 52.5 | MIDLF (CBT) | CBT group showed less BL and shorter length of hospital day. Both groups showed significant improvements in preoperative ODI, VAS scores. However, there was no significant difference between two groups in regard to OP time and amount of improvement in VAS pain score or ODI. |
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| Hung et al. [ | Cohort | 4 | 16 | 16 | 60.37±11.07 | 64.12±5.79 | 5/11 | 6/10 | 18 | 18 | PLIF | Clinical improvement (pain VAS, ODI, JOA score) was significant in both groups. However, there were no significant differences in OP time, BL, length of hospital stay, and recovery rate between the groups. The fat infiltration ratio was lower in the CBT group than PS group. |
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| Lee et al. [ | RCT | 2 | 22 | 31 | 51.2±11.9 | 51.7±10.4 | 31/4 | 33/4 | 24 | 24 | PLIF | Postoperative pain VAS, satisfaction rate (ODI), and surgical outcomes (lesser BL, shorter OP time and length of hospital stay, incision length) were better in CBT screw fixation group. |
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| Lee et al. [ | RCT | 2 | 38 | 39 | 51.3±12.4 | 51.9±11.7 | 33/5 | 34/5 | 12 | 12 | PLIF | CBT group showed better clinical outcome and pain improvement, functional recovery, although there was no significant difference. Also, CBT was related to less surgical morbidity and OP time and BL and shorter incision length. |
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| Lee et al. [ | Cohort | 4 | 35 | 37 | 32.7±10.1 | 64.2±9.3 | 9/13 | 12/19 | 12 | 12 | PLIF+PLF | Satisfaction (ODI) at 1-month FU is greater in CBT group. However, there was no significant difference between the groups at the 1–2-year FUs. |
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| Liu et al. [ | Cohort | 4 | 50 | 54 | 68±5 | 67±5 | 26/24 | 27/27 | 36 | 36 | PLIF | CBT group showed shorter OP time, less intraoperative BL, faster postoperative recovery, and lower complication rates. |
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| Malcolm et al. [ | Cohort | 4 | 45 | 35 | 63±9 | 57±11 | 20/25 | 7/28 | 12 | 12 | TLIF | CBT is associated less BL, fewer transfusions, reduced OP time, shorter length of stay, and no difference in complications. |
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| Marengo et al. [ | Cohort | 4 | 18 | 17 | 45±9.63 | 54±12.01 | 12/8 | 9/11 | 12 | 12 | PLIF | CBT is related less muscle damage. And clinical outcomes (pain VAS, ODI, Euroquality-5D, etc.) were better in CBT group. |
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| Peng et al. [ | Cohort | 4 | 51 | 46 | 62.8 | 61.9 | 23/28 | 21/25 | 24 | 24 | PLIF | CBT group showed significantly shorter OP time and length of hospital day, less BL, and lower postoperative serum creatine level. The complication rates were lower in the CBT group. However, there was no significant difference between two groups. |
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| Sakaura et al. [ | Cohort | 4 | 95 | 82 | 68.7±9.5 | 67±8.7 | 46/49 | 36/46 | 35 | 40 | PLIF | Improvement of clinical symptoms (JOA score) in CBT screw fixation was comparable with PS fixation. However, fusion rate was lower in the CBT group than in the PS group, although there were no significant differences between two groups. |
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| Sakaura et al. [ | Cohort | 4 | 22 | 20 | 70.7±7.3 | 68.3±9.6 | 4/18 | 6/14 | 39 | 35 | PLIF | CBT showed less BL and OP time. Improvement of clinical symptoms was equal. |
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| Sakaura et al. [ | Cohort | 4 | 102 | 77 | 67.5±9.2 | 66.4±10.5 | 35/67 | 28/49 | 36 | 36 | PLIF | Early cephalad R-ASD rates were lower in CBT group than PS group. Narrowing of disc space, anterior slippage, and posterior slippage was significantly lower in the CBT group than PS group. |
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| Takenaka et al. [ | Cohort | 4 | 42 | 77 | 65.7±8.1 | 65.7±11.4 | 18/24 | 31/46 | 17 | 35 | PLIF | CBT group revealed less BL, less intraoperative muscle damage (lower postoperative creatine kinase levels), less perioperative pain (less pain control medication), and lower numeric rating scale scores. |
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| Xi et al. [ | Cohort | 4 | 12 | 20 | 63.4±6.1 | 63.4±6.1 | NM | NM | 11 | 11 | PLIF+TLIF | Better satisfaction (JOA score) and less pain VAS were showed in CBT group. CBT screw fixation is related to less muscle damage. |
Values are presented as number or mean±standard deviation.
FU, follow-up; CBT, cortical bone trajectory; PS, Pedicle screw; NM, not mentioned; VAS, Visual Analog Scale; ODI, Oswestry Disability Index; MIDLF, midline lumbar fusion; TLIF, transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion; BL, blood loss; PLIF, posterior lumbar interbody fusion; JOA score, Japanese Orthopaedic Association score; OP, operation; RCT, randomized controlled trial; PLF, posterolateral fusion; ASD, adjacent segment degeneration; R-ASD, radiological-ASD; S-ASD, symptomatic-ASD.