| Literature DB >> 35071061 |
Kirit Arumalla1, Hanish Bansal2, Jigarsingh Jadeja3, Aman Batish4, Harsh Deora1, Manjul Tripathi4, Sandeep Mohindra4, Sanjay Behari5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Since the landmark publication by Smith and Robinson, approaches to the cervical spine anteriorly have undergone many modifications and even additions. Nevertheless, at its core, the anterior approach remains an elegant and efficient approach to deal with majority of cervical spine pathologies including the degenerative cervical spine.Entities:
Keywords: Anterior cervical approach; cervical spine; cervical spondylotic myelopathy; corpectomy
Year: 2021 PMID: 35071061 PMCID: PMC8751502 DOI: 10.4103/ajns.AJNS_313_20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Asian J Neurosurg
Overview of the anterior approaches to the cervical spine
| Level of cervical spine | Type of anterior approach | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| C1–C2 | Transoral | Provides access to largely inaccessible pathologies and anatomical zones | Oral complications |
| C2–C7 | Anterolateral cervical | Reliable and reproducible | Esophageal and tracheal compression/injury |
| C7–T4 | Transmanubrium | Provides anterior access to upper thoracic and lower cervical spine | Window of surgery is limited |
CSF – Cerebrospinal fluid
Inclusion criteria for various categories included in the study
| Category | Inclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| Transoral and trans-sternal | Case series >10 patients |
| Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion case series | Case series with >100 patients |
| Case series of anterior cervical Discectomy and fusion versus anterior cervical corpectomy and fusion | Case series >10 patients comparing ACDF versus ACCF |
| Case series of ACDF versus posterior cervical foraminotomy | Case series >10 patients comparing ACDF versus posterior cervical foraminotomy |
| Case series comparing compared ACDF versus cervical arthroplasty | Case series >10 patients comparing ACDF versus arthroplasty |
ACDF – Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion; ACCF – Anterior cervical corpectomy and fusion
Figure 1PRISMA chart depicting transoral surgeries
Figure 6PRISMA chart comparing transternal approaches
A review of some of the larger recent series of transoral approach with complications and outcomes
| Author and year | Number of cases | Complications | Outcomes | Levels fused | Remarks | Follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Crockard | 68 | Vertebral artery injury-1, cord damage-1 | 61 (90%) improved, 3 (4%) deteriorated, 1 died | Occipito-C2/C3 fusion | Transoral decompression relieve ventral compression in rheumatoid arthritis | - |
| Hadley | 53 | 5.6% wound dehiscence with CSF leak | 94% neurological improvement | Occipito-C3 levels | Good result for ventral pathology | 2 years |
| Dickman | 27 | None | 22 (81%) improved, 5 (19%) stabilized | 9 (33%) fusion of C1–C2, 10 (37%) occipitocervical fusion | Transoral decompression relieves decompression and fusion required in >70% patients and 90% of rheumatoid arthritis patients | 14 months |
| Tuite | 27 | Neurological deterioration-4 (15%), CSF leak-2, wound infection-3, palatal fistula-2 | 9 (33%) improved, 4 (15%) worse, 15 (52%) remained same | Occipito-C3/C5/T4 (1 patient) | Transoral surgery in congenital diseases requires less extensive surgery compared to oncological condition but associated with worse neurological outcomes | 4.6 years |
| Jain | 74 | Pharyngeal wound sepsis leading to dehiscence (20.3%) and hemorrhage (4%), velopharyngeal insufficiency (8.1%), CSF leak (6.7%) and inadequate decompression (6.7%) | 26 (55.3%) showed improvement from their preoperative status while 14 (29.8%) demonstrated stabilization of their neurological deficits. 7 (14.9%) of them deteriorated | C1-2-3 | TOD is logical and effective in relieving ventral compression due to craniovertebral junction anomalies; it carries the formidable risks of instability, incomplete decompression, neurological deterioration, CSF leak, infection and palatopharyngeal dysfunction | 3–24 months |
| Menezes (2008)[ | 28 | Wound dehiscence 2, velopalatine insufficiency 5, retropharyngeal infection 1 | Neurological improvement in all patients | C1, C2, and C2–3 disc pathology | Indicated in irreducible pathology | - |
| Mouchaty | 53 | 2 mortality, 8 patients had morbidity – CSF leak, wound dehiscence, meningitis | 51 patients had improvement | C1, C2 | Indicated in severe BI | 4–96 months |
| Shousha | 139 | 3.6% wound infection early, late in 1 patient | 94% neurological improvement | - | Postoperative infections higher in rheumatic disease group | 4.5 years |
| Elbadrawi and Elkhateeb (2017)[ | 20 | CSF leak wound dehiscence | Improvement in VAS and Nurick score | C2 | Safe and effective surgical method for the direct decompression of ventral midline extradural compressive disease of the craniovertebral junction | 29.4±3.8 months |
VAS – Visual analog scale; CSF – Cerebrospinal fluid
Review of the larger series reported with the transmanubrial approach along with complications and outcomes
| Author and year | Number of cases | Complications | Outcomes | Levels fused | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Xiao (2007)[ | 28 | 11 patients had bradycardia and hypotension, 3 had recurrent laryngeal nerve paresis | Improvement in pain and neurological symptoms in all | C7–T4 | On the right side, its easier approach than left due to thoracic duct |
| Liu | 11 | 1 patient had recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy, 1 patient had chyle leak | Improvement in incomplete cord injury and radiculopathy | C6–T2 | Adequate access to upper cervical region |
| Falavigna | 14 | Hematoma - 1 | Improvement in all patients | C7–T4 | C7 corpectomy and C7–T1 intervertebral disc herniation, a transcervical approach without the manubriotomy was indicated; when a T1 and/or T2 corpectomy was necessary, the transmanubrial approach usually was necessary in order to provide a good working space to perform a corpectomy and reconstruction |
| Jiang | 16 | 1 patient hoarseness of voice | 8 patients had neurological improvement | C7–T4 | It leads to better visulaisation |
| Zengming | 54 | - | Improvement in radiculopathy and myelopathy | C7–T4 | Adequate access to spine and immediate stability |
| Park | 13 | Chylothorax - 1 | Improvement in VAS and Frenkel | C7–T3 | The transmanubrial approach for CTJ lesions can achieve favorable clinical outcomes by providing direct decompression of lesion and effective reconstruction |
| Mihir | 28 | Left recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy 2 cases | Improvement in neurological deficits | C7–T4 | Safe approach for stabilization of anterior spine |
VAS – Visual analog scale; CTJ – Cervicothoracic junction
Review of the large anterior cervical discectomy series with results and complications
| Author and year | Number of cases | Complications | Outcomes | Levels fused | Follow-up (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marotta | 167 | 20% adjacent segment disease | Significant improvement in NDI, VAS score postoperative | Single level | 60 |
| Lu | 150 | No difference in dysphagia in both groups with slight increase in pseudarthrosis in allograft group | Significant decrease in Nurick score compared to preoperatively, however, no difference with addition of r-BMP | Multiple levels up to 4 levels | 35 |
| Klingler | 109 | 10% subsidence in follow up | VAS, NDI significant better in follow-up with no significant difference between PEEK cage and PMMA cage | 70% single-level, 30% 2-level | 29 |
| Li | 138 | 1.5% EDH, hoarseness, dysphagia 7.4%, infection, subsidence 9.8% in cage versus 7.4% in cage+plate | Significant improvement in SF-36, VAS, NDI, JOA score in all group | Up to 4 levels performed | 26 |
| Zigler | 186 | Adjacent segment disease high in 2-level group compared to single level | Significant improvement in NDI, VAS, SF-12 score | Single and 2 levels | 60 |
| Tasiou | 114 | CSF leak, dysphagia, recurrent laryngeal nerve plasy, trachea-esophageal fistula, implant failure | Earlier assessment of perioperative complications – better results | Both single- and multiple-level discs | 42.5 |
| Burkhardt | 122 | Rate of adjacent segment disease is 10%, 8% postoperative dysphagia | 89.3% had high rate of radicular pain relief | 64% single-level, 33% two-level, 3.3% 3-level | 300 |
| Grasso and Landi, 2018[ | 100 | 2% dysphagia experienced | VAS, improved significantly immediate after surgery and continue till the last follow-up | 73% one-level, 27% 2-level | 84 |
| Tumialán | 135 | 2.3% transient laryngeal nerve palsy | 88% had improvement with return to work | 76% single-level, 24% 2-level | 48 |
| Mullins | 1123 | 3.6% had complication | VAS and clinical improvement seen significantly in all groups | 40% single-level, 34% 2-level, 22% 3-level, 3% 4-level | 25 |
| He | 104 | 4% complication in zero profile device and 17% of ACDF | Clinical improvement significant in both groups with no difference between | Multiple levels | 24 |
| Muzevic | 154 | - | 80% had clinical improvement | One to multiple levels | 24 |
| Yu | 247 | Greater incidence of subsidence in nonfixed system | VAS and clinical outcomes improvement significant and no different between standalone cage versus fusion with cage and plate | One or two level | 24 |
| Butterman 2018[ | 159 | 10% pseudarthrosis and 21% adjacent segment disease | 85%–95% improvement in neurological outcome | Single to 2 levels | 120 |
| Lee | 167 | 5 cases pseudarthrosis | VAS of arm pain better in uncinate process removal compared to nonremoval | Single and 2 level | 31.4 |
| Yang | 134 | 4% have dysphagia | VAS and NDI reduced postoperatively | 2 | 29.68 |
| Shin, 2019[ | 165 | 20% adjacent segment disease | VAS and NDI reduced postoperatively at all levels but lesser in 3-level discectomy | Up to 3 levels | 31.9 |
| Basques | 379 | 20% adjacent segment disease | VAS and NDI improvement after surgery, but longer duration of radiculopathy poor improvement | 45% two-level, 30% single-level, and 25% 3-level | 28.2 |
| Shousha | 2078 | 0.9% hematoma, dysphagia, and cage subsidence seen | VAS and NDI improved significantly, however reoperation rate higher in long-segment group | 40% single-level, 40% two-level, and 20% multiple-levels | 37.8 |
NDI – Neck disability index; VAS – Visual analog scale; SF-12 – Short Form 12; JOA – Japanese Orthopaedic Scale; ACDF – Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion; PEEK – Polyether ether ketone; PMMA – Polymethyl methacrylate; EDH – Epidural hematoma; r -BMP – Recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-2
Studies comparing anterior cervical discectomy and fusion versus cervical disc arthroplasty
| Study | Design | Country | Age (years) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Porchet and Metcalf (2004)[ | RCT | Switzerland | 27/28 | 44 |
| Mummaneni | RCT | USA | 275/265 | 43.5 |
| Nabhan | RCT | Germany | 20/21 | 44 |
| Murrey | RCT | USA | 103/106 | 42.5 |
| Sasso | RCT | USA | 242/241 | 44.7 |
| Riina | RCT | USA | 10/9 | 39 |
| Riew | RCT | USA | 59/52 | 45 |
| Heller | RCT | USA | 106/93 | 44.5 |
| Cheng | RCT | USA | 41/42 | 47.2 |
| Mcafee | RCT | USA | 151/100 | 44.5 |
| Coric | RCT | USA | 136/139 | 44 |
| Zhang | RCT | China | 60/60 | 44.8/45.6 |
| Vaccaro | RCT | USA | 236/144 | 44 |
| Davis | RCT | USA | 225/105 | 45.7 |
| Phillips | RCT | USA | 163/130 | 45.3/43.7 |
| Rozankovic | RCT | Croatia | 51/50 | 49 |
| Qizhi | RCT | China | 14/16 | 64.2 |
| Zhang | RCT | USA | 55/56 | 44.8 |
| Hisey | RCT | USA | 164/81 | 43.5 |
| Skeppholm (2015)[ | RCT | Sweden | 73/80 | 42.2 |
| Jacksont | RCT | USA | 179/81 (single level), 231/105 (2 level) | - |
CDA – Cervical disc arthroplasty; ACDF – Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion; RCT – Randomized controlled trials
Comparison of the posterior foraminotomy versus anterior cervical discectomy for a single level radiculopathy
| Study | Design | Country | Number of cases | Surgical levels | Follow up | Mean age (years) | Outcome criteria | Clinical outcome (ACDF vs PCF) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ruetten | RCT | Germany | ACDF: 86 PCF: 89 | Single-level | 2 years each | 43 | VAS, German version NASS, Hilibrand criteria | |
| Herkowitz | RCT | USA | ACDF: 17 PCF: 16 | Single-level | 4.2 years | ACDF: 43, PCF: 39 | Relief of pain and weakness | 94% versus 75% ( |
| Wirth | RCT | USA | ACDF: 25 PCF: 22 | Single-level | 60 months each | ACDF: 41.7, PCF: 43.8 | Incidence of pain relief | 96% versus 100% ( |
| Selvanathan | RCoS | UK | ACDF: 150 PCF: 51 | N/A | ACDF: 24±1.4 months | ACDF: 48, PCF: 50 | NDI VAS neck and arm | |
| Korinth | RCoS | Germany | ACDF: 124 PCF: 168 | Single-level | 72.1±25.9 months | ACDF: 45.9±8.2, PCF: 46.9±10.4 | Success rate (Odom I+II) | 93.6% versus 85.1% ( |
| Alvin | RCoS | USA | ACDF: 45 PCF: 25 | Single-level | 3 years | ACDF: 49.3±9.6, PCF: 46.5±11.32 | VAS, PDQ, PHQ-9, EQ-5D |
NASS – North American spine society; EQ-5D – EuroQol-5 dimensions; NDI – Neck disability index; PCF – Posterior cervical foraminotomy; PDQ – Pain disability questionnaire; PHQ – Patient health questionnaire; RCoS – Retrospective comparative study; RCT – Randomized controlled trail; VAS – Visual analog scale; EQ-5D – Euro QOF5 dimensional; ACDF – Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion; N/A – Not applicable
Comparison of outcomes of anterior cervical discectomy and fusion versus corpectomy and fusion in cases of cervical myelopathy
| Study (year) | Design | Sample size | Mean age (years) | Gender (male/female) | Mean follow up (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oh | RCT | ACCF: 17 | ACCF: 55.12 | 16/15 | ACCF: 27.33 |
| Yu | RCT | ACCF: 20 | ACCF: 53.1 | ACCF: 14/6 | N/A |
| Liu | RCoS | ACCF: 23 | ACCF: 54.4 | ACCF: 18/5 | ACCF: 31 |
| Park | RCoS | ACCF: 52 | ACCF: 49.4 | ACCF: 30/22 | ACCF: 23.3 |
| Wang | RCoS | ACCF: 20 | ACCF: 51.5 | 27/25 | 43.2 |
| Yu | RCoS | ACCF: 48 | ACCF: 59.3 | 65/45 | 32 |
| Jia | RCoS | ACCF: 36 | ACCF: 48.83 | ACCF: 21/15 | ACCF: 28.96 |
ACDF – Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion; ACCF – Anterior cervical corpectomy and fusion; RCoS – Retrospective comparative study; RCT – Randomized controlled trail; N/A – Not applicable
Checklist of examinations before transoral approach
| Area | Review for |
|---|---|
| Dental hygiene | Dental caries- nidus of infection |
| Loose teeth | Put dental guards or remove the loose tooth |
| Lower cranial nerves | Look for |
| Gag reflex | |
| Uvula – central or pushed to one side | |
| Swallowing impaired leading to malnutrition | |
| Consent for tracheostomy | |
| Mouth opening | Jaw excursion should be at least 2.5 cm |
| Look for temporomandibular joint stiffness | |
| Infection | Prophylactic antibiotic coverage |
| Preoperative culture swabs | |
| Airway | Review for oro-tracheal versus nasotracheal intubation |
| Especially in cases that may need prolonged ventilation |
Figure 7(a) Magnetic resonance imaging T2-weighted sagittal images showing atlantoaxial dislocation with retroflexed odontoid, causing compression of the cervical cord along with cord signal changes. (b and c) Postoperative sagittal computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging T2-weighted images showing decompression of the cervical cord with transoral decompression of the odontoid
Complications of the transoral approach
| Complication | Management |
|---|---|
| CSF leak | Avoid if possible |
| Tongue swelling | Keep endotracheal tube for 24 h to avoid respiratory distress |
| Infection | Preoperative nasogastric tube for draining gastric contents |
| Wound breakdown | Tension-free closure |
| Nutrition | High-protein diet |
CSF – Cerebrospinal fluid
Figure 8(a) Magnetic resonance imaging T2-weighted sagittal images showing subluxation of the C5–C6 vertebrae causing compression of the cervical cord along with cord signal changes. (b-d) Postoperative sagittal X-ray, computed tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging T2-weighted images showing decompression and realignment of the cervical cord with fixation using cervical plates and screws
Figure 9(a) Magnetic resonance imaging T2-weighted sagittal images showing C5–C6 level OPLL with kyphosis causing compression of the cervical cord pronounced at the C6 level. (b) Postoperative sagittal computed tomography images showing decompression and restoration of the cervical lordosis after C6 corpectomy and fixation using cervical plates and screws