| Literature DB >> 35295793 |
Vinicius Tieppo Francio1, Benjamin D Westerhaus2, Adam Rupp1, Dawood Sayed3.
Abstract
Chronic low back pain remains highly prevalent, costly, and the leading cause of disability worldwide. Symptoms are complex and treatment involves an interdisciplinary approach. Due to diverse anatomical etiologies, treatment outcomes with interventional options are highly variable. A novel approach to treating chronic axial low back pain entails the use of peripheral nerve stimulation to the lumbar medial branch nerve, and this review examines the clinical data of the two different, commercially available, non-spinal neuromodulation systems. This review provides the clinician a succinct narrative that presents up-to-date data objectively. Our review found ten clinical studies, including one report of two cases, six prospective studies, and three randomized clinical trials published to date. Currently, there are different proposed mechanisms of action to address chronic axial low back pain with different implantation techniques. Evidence suggests that peripheral nerve stimulation of the lumbar medial branch nerve may be effective in improving pain and function in patients with chronic axial low back pain symptoms at short and long term follow up, with good safety profiles. Further long-term data is needed to consider this intervention earlier in the pain treatment algorithm, but initial data are promising.Entities:
Keywords: low back pain; lumbar medial branch; multifidus; neuromodulation; peripheral nerve stimulation
Year: 2022 PMID: 35295793 PMCID: PMC8915554 DOI: 10.3389/fpain.2022.835519
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pain Res (Lausanne) ISSN: 2673-561X
Inclusion and exclusion criteria of the literature review.
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| Original peer-reviewed research | Book chapters, letters to the editor, websites, etc. |
| English language | Manuscripts in languages other than English |
| Human studies | Non-human studies |
| Intervention specifically targeting the lumbar medial branch | Duplicate data |
Summary of findings.
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| Thomson et al. ( | P-MC Longitudinal Cohort | I: >90 days LBP, refracotry to ctherapy and medications | 2b | 37 | ReActive 2 yr | NRS | ODI BL 46.2 ± 2.2 2yr 29.2 ± 3.1 ( | |
| Deer et al. ( | P-MC | I: >12 weeks LBP with failure to >4 weeks of medications, BPI-5>4 points | 2b | 15 | SPRINT 5 months | BPI-5 | ODI BL 43.1 +/- 12.7 2 mo 21.8 +/- 13.9 5 mo 26.1+/- 13.2 | 4 lead migration |
| Mitchell et al. ( | P-MC single arm | I: chronic LBP >90 days refractory to medical management, ODI 25–60% and average NRS 6–9 | 2b | 53 | ReActiv8 4 years | NRS | ODI BL44.9± 10.1 4 yr 23± 3.2 EQ-5D BL 0.434± 0.185 4 yr 0.721± 0.035 | |
| Gilligan et al. ( | DB-RCT-MC sham-control | I: mechanical CLBP >90 days refractory to emdical treatmnt, prior week average VAS 6–9, ODI 21–60 | 1b | 204 | ReActiv8 120 days | VAS change | ODI change Tx −17.5 ± 15 Sham −12.2 ± 14.6 95% CI −5.4 (−9.5, −1.2) | 3.9% infection |
| Gilmore et al. ( | P-MC | I: LBP >12 weeks, failed conservative treatment | 2b | 74 | SPRINT 14 months | BPI-5 | ODI BL 38.5 +/-12.5 14 mo 29.5 +/- 15.3 | 28 skin irritation |
| Gilmore et al. ( | Prospective case series | I: LBP >12 weeks refractory to >4 week trial of medications, week average BPI >4 | 2b | 6 | SPRINT 12 months | BPI-5 | ODI 32 pt reduction Statistically significant | 2 skin irritation |
| epidural within 3 months, RFA within 6 months, BMI ≥40, BDI-II > 20 | ||||||||
| Gilmore et al. ( | Prospective case series | I: LBP >12 weeks refractory to >4 weeks medications, BPI week average >4 | 2b | 9 | SPRINT 4 months | BPI-5 | ODI 67 >10 point reduction 95%CI (0.36–0.97) | 2 skin irritation |
| Cohen et al. ( | Case-series | I: LBP >3months refractory to >4 week trial of medications, BPI >4 | 4b | 9 | SPRINT 1, 4, 7, months | BPI-5 | ODI BL 32.9 1 mo 18.5 4 mo 19.4 7 mo 26.1 | 2 skin irritation |
| Deckers et al. ( | P-MC single arm trial | I: chronic LBP >90 days refractory to medical management, ODI 25%−60%, average NRS 6–9 | 2b | 53 | ReActiv8 60, 90, 365 days | NRS change from BL | ODI improvement 90d 13.4 ± 2.2 ( | 14 increased pain |
| Kapural et al. ( | Report of two cases | I: LBP > 3 months refractory to >4 week trial of emdications, week average BPI >4 | 4b | 2 | SPRINT 4 months | BPI-5 | ODI Subject 1 BL 17 4 mo 18 Subject 2 BL 50 4 mo 8 87% improvement | 1 skin irritation |
N, number of subjects; P, Prospective; MC, Multicenter; DB, Double Blind; BPI-5/9, Brief Pain Inventory; NRS, Numerical rating scale; VAS, visual analog scale; ODI, Oswestry Disability Index; EQ-5D, European Quality of Life Five Dimension; BL, Baseline; BDI, Bec Depression Inventory; Tx, treatment; RFA, radiofrequency ablation; MBB, medial branch block.
Similarities and differences between two different PNS systems for chronic low back pain.
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| Proposed mechanism of action | Palliative neuromodulation | Restorative neurostimulation |
| Nerve targeted | Lumbar medial branch L1–L5 | Lumbar medial branch of L2 |
| Primary effector targeted | Afferent, sensory nerve | Efferent, motor nerve |
| Patient selection | Chronic axial low back pain | Multifidus dysfunction evidenced by diagnostic imaging findings with multifidus muscle atrophy and/or positive physical exam maneuvers (prone instability test and multifidus lift test) |
| Lead wires | Fine wire electrode | Traditional lead with 4 electrode arrangement |
| Pulse generator | External | Subcutaneous |
| Imaging modality of placement | Fluoroscopy or ultrasound | Fluoroscopy |
| Stimulation | Low frequency, high amplitude, 6 hours per day | Low frequency, high amplitude, two 30-min sessions per day |
| Duration of therapy | 60 days, temporary | Permanent implant |