| Literature DB >> 35000324 |
Nikolay Peev1, Mehmet Zileli2, Salman Sharif3, Shahswar Arif1,4, Zarina Brady1,4.
Abstract
Thoracolumbar spine is the most injured spinal region in blunt trauma. Literature on the indications for nonoperative treatment of thoracolumbar fractures is conflicting. The purpose of this systematic review is to clarify the indications for nonsurgical treatment of thoracolumbar fractures. We conducted a systematic literature search between 2010 to 2020 on PubMed/MEDLINE, and Cochrane Central. Up-to-date literature on the indications for nonoperative treatment of thoracolumbar fractures was reviewed to reach an agreement in a consensus meeting of WFNS (World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies) Spine Committee. The statements were voted and reached a positive or negative consensus using the Delphi method. For all of the questions discussed, the literature search yielded 1,264 studies, from which 54 articles were selected for full-text review. Nine studies (4 trials, and 5 retrospective) evaluating 759 participants with thoracolumbar fractures who underwent nonoperative/surgery were included. Although, compression type and stable burst fractures can be managed conservatively, if there is major vertebral body damage, kyphotic angulation, neurological deficit, spinal canal compromise, surgery may be indicated. AO type B, C fractures are preferably treated surgically. Future research is necessary to tackle the relative paucity of evidence pertaining to patients with thoracolumbar fractures.Entities:
Keywords: Burst fractures; Compression fractures; Conservative treatment; Indications for nonoperative treatment; Neurological deficit; Thoracolumbar fractures
Year: 2021 PMID: 35000324 PMCID: PMC8752701 DOI: 10.14245/ns.2142390.195
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurospine ISSN: 2586-6591
Fig. 1.PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) flow diagram of the review process.
Clinical outcomes following nonoperative and operative treatments for AO type A thoracolumbar fractures
| Study | Study design | Country | No. | Fracture type + neurological deficit | Type of treatment | Mean pain score (VAS) | Mean kyphotic angle (°) | Mean vertebral height loss (%) | Mean physical compartment score (SF-36) | Mean mental compartment score (SF-36) | Mean hospital stay (day) | Mean return to work (day) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Karaali et al. [ | Retrospective | Turkey | 74 | Compression + burst fractures | Nonoperative vs. surgery | Nonoperative, 2.64; surgery, 1.91 | Nonoperative, 35.5; surgery, 25.12 | Nonoperative, 62.9; surgery, 21.2 | N/A | N/A | Nonoperative, 1.50; surgery, 3.18 | Nonoperative, 142.2; surgery, 104.79 |
| No neurological deficit | ||||||||||||
| Pehlivanoglu et al. [ | Retrospective | Turkey | 45 | A3, A4 burst fractures | Nonoperative vs. surgery | Nonopera- tive, 2.3; surgery, 1.9 | Nonoperative, 11.65; surgery, 4.09 | Nonoperative, 12.78; surgery, 7.87 | Nonoperative, 56.67; surgery, 56.74 | Nonoperative, 55.5; surgery, 55.47 | Nonoperative, 11.0; surgery, 9.0 | N/A |
| No neurological deficit | ||||||||||||
| Nataraj et al. [ | Retrospective | Canada | 230 | Burst fractures + no neurological deficit | Nonoperative vs. surgery | Nonopera- tive, 2.9; surgery, 3.3 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | Nonoperative, 11.0; surgery, 23.0 |
| Urquhart et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial | Canada | 96 | A3 fractures (burst) + no neurological deficit | TLSO (Brace) vs. no bracing | N/A | N/A | N/A | TLSO, 46.5%; no bracing, 45.5% | TLSO, 55.8%; no bracing, 55.2% | N/A | N/A |
| Hitchon et al. [ | Retrospective | USA | 68 | Burst | Nonoperative vs. surgery | Nonopera- tive, 1.9; surgery, 3.0 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| No deficit | ||||||||||||
| Shen et al. [ | Retrospective | China | 129 | Burst + no (new) neurological deficit | Nonoperative vs. surgery | N/A | Nonoperative, 11.3; surgery, 22.7 | Nonoperative, 29.4; surgery, 31.5 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Wood et al. [ | Prospective randomised | USA | 47 | Stable burst fracture | Nonoperative vs. surgery | Nonopera- tive, 1.5; surgery, 3.0 | N/A | N/A | Nonoperative, 89.5; surgery, 70.0 | Nonoperative, 89.0; surgery, 72.0 | N/A | N/A |
| No neurological deficit | ||||||||||||
| Shamji et al. [ | Randomized controlled trial | Canada | 23 | Burst | Bracing (TLSO) vs. no bracing | N/A | N/A | TLSO, 47.6%; no bracing, 44% | TLSO, 51.6%; no bracing, 51.2% | TLSO, 43.3%; no bracing, 46.6% | N/A | N/A |
| No neurological deficit | ||||||||||||
| Bailey et al. [ | Randomized equivalence trial | Canada | 47 | Burst | Orthoses vs. no orthoses | N/A | N/A | N/A | TLSO, 39.1%; no bracing, 36.6% | TLSO, 52.2%; no bracing, 50.8% | N/A | N/A |
| No neurological deficit |
VAS, visual analogue scale; SF-36, 36-item Short Form Health Survey; NA, not available.
A comparative analysis between nonoperative versus operative treatments for AO type A thoracolumbar fractures
| Characteristic | Nonoperative | Surgery | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean pain VAS score | 2.25 | 2.62 | 0.33 |
| Mean kyphotic angle (°) | 19.45 | 17.30 | 0.81 |
| Mean vertebral height loss (%) | 37.72 | 20.19 | 0.17 |
| Mean physical compartment score (SF-36) | 56.29 | 63.37 | 0.48 |
| Mean mental compartment score (SF-36) | 59.30 | 63.74 | 0.65 |
| Mean hospital stay (day) | 6.25 | 6.09 | 0.97 |
| Mean return to work (day) | 76.60 | 63.90 | 0.84 |
VAS, visual analogue scale; SF-36, 36-item Short Form Health Survey.
The major characteristics and pros/cons of each classification system being used in evaluating thoracolumbar spine fractures
| Classification system | Characteristics | Pros/cons |
|---|---|---|
| Denis | 1. A 3-column theory based on 2-column theory of Holdsworth [ | Pros: It is simple and introduces the idea of damage to the neurological system [ |
| 2. Suggests that fractures of the middle column were very unstable. | Cons: it is quite challenging to identify thoracolumbar stable and unstable burst fractures [ | |
| 3. According to morphology of the fracture and mechanism of injury, thoracolumbar fractures were classified as compression, burst, flexion-distraction, and fracture dislocation. | Furthermore, it does not allow physicians to assess their therapeutic options for special fracture patterns on numerical evaluation of postfracture stability [ | |
| McAfee | 1. PLC is a significant structure for the stability of the fracture, owing to the CT results. | Pros: Clear picture on surgical intervention required for type of fractures – stable burst or unstable burst [ |
| 2. Subcategorised the middle column trauma and suggested that the middle column fails by a trio of several forces such as axial compression, distraction, and translation. | ||
| 3. Taking the mechanism of trauma into account, the authors separated such fractures into various categories, wedge compression fractures, stable, unstable burst fractures, chance fractures, flexion-distraction injuries, and translational injury [ | Cons: lack of studies evaluating its reliability and validity [ | |
| McCormack | 1. Forecasts the risk of failure of implant post posterior short-segment fixation for thoracolumbar spine fractures. | Pros: Load sharing score links well with the degree of spinal instability [ |
| 2. Primarily introduction was in the aim of avoiding repeat kyphosis and failure of posterior short-segment fixation with pedicle screws through allowing the most suitable approach regarding approach (surgery). | Excellent inter- and intraobserver reliability was noted for junior surgeons [ | |
| Cons: This classification intends only to identify fractures that would require additional anterior fixation following a posterior surgery [ | ||
| AOSpine | 1. Categorises trauma into 3 groups, A (compression), B (distraction), and C (translation) injuries [ | Cons: AO Classification attempted to advise the comprehensive classification including all varied type of fractures, it showcased solely moderate intraobserver and interobserver reliability owing to its complexity [ |
| 2. Each category was further subcategorised from A1 to C3 (the higher the subgroup, the higher the severity of trauma and more unstable fractures | Further drawbacks include its inability to formulate a definition of stability of the fracture as well as no mention of a injury to the neurological function [ | |
| TLICS | 1. The classification appears more comprehensive in comparison to the previous AO classification and includes information on neurological status and posterior ligamentous integrity [ | Pros: The classification appears more comprehensive in comparison to the previous AO classification and includes significant information on neurological status and posterior ligamentous integrity [ |
| 2. In terms of neurological functional status, grades vary from N0 (Neurologically intact), N1 (Transient deficit of neurological function), N2 (radicular symptoms), N3 (incomplete SCI or cauda equina injury), N4 (complete SCI), NX (unknown neurologic status owing to sedation or trauma to the head) [ | ||
| 3. Morphological analyzes hold a great deal of significance as it aids in therapeutic choices [ | Evaluation of TLISS showcased fair to substantial intraobserver and interobserver reliability in various studies [ | |
| 4. Conservative treatment is indicated for the total score of 3 points, 4 points to the grey area, where the decision on the therapy is taken by the physician, a score of 5 points indicates surgical treatment |
PLC, posterior ligamentous complex; CT, computed tomography; SCI, spinal cord injury; TLICS, thoracolumbar injury classification and severity score; TLISS, thoracolumbar injury severity score.