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Surgery improves pain and function better
than nonoperative care for degenerative spondylolisthesis and
spinal stenosis
June 2007
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Patients treated surgically for degenerative
spondylolisthesis and spinal stenosis experience a substantially
greater improvement in pain and function at 2 years follow-up
compared to patients managed nonsurgically, according to results
from the on-going Spine Patient Outcomes Research Trial.
"In patients with image-confirmed degenerative
spondylolisthesis and symptoms persisting for at least 12 weeks,
the intention-to-treat analysis found no significant advantage
for surgery over nonsurgical care, but the analysis was severely
limited by treatment crossover," the study authors wrote.
"As-treated analyses showed that surgery was superior to
nonsurgical treatment in relieving symptoms and improving
function. This treatment effect was seen as early as at the
6-week follow-up and persisted over 2 years. The nonsurgical-treatment
group showed only moderate improvement over time," the authors
reported.
James N. Weinstein, DO, and colleagues at numerous centers in
the United States, are conducting the Spine Patient Outcomes
Research Trial (SPORT) to compare the efficacy of surgical and
nonsurgical treatment of patients with confirmed diagnoses of
intervertebral disk herniation, spinal stenosis and degenerative
spondylolisthesis. They published their results of this arm of
the trial in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Nonsurgical treatments included physical therapy, epidural
steroid injections, NSAIDs and opioids.
Overall, the SPORT study enrolled 607 patients to either
randomized or observational groups. The randomized group
included 304 patients — 159 patients were randomly assigned to
receive surgery and 145 were randomly assigned to nonsurgical
management. Of the patients assigned to surgery, 57% received
surgery within 1 year and 64% received surgery by 2 years,
according to the study. Of patients assigned to nonsurgical
management, 44% received surgery within 1 year and 49% by 2
years, according to the study.
The observational group included 303 patients. Of these, 173
initially chose to undergo surgery, and 97% of those patients
received surgery within 1 year.
Among the 130 patients who initially chose nonsurgical
management, 17% received surgery within 1 year and 25% received
surgery by 2 years follow-up, according to the study.
"In both cohorts combined, 372 patients underwent surgery
within the first 2 years and 235 received only nonsurgical
treatment," the authors wrote.
In the intention-to-treat analysis of patients in the
randomized group, investigators found no statistically
significant effects for the primary outcomes at 2 years.
However, "As-treated effects for the combined cohorts were
statistically significant in favor of surgery for all primary
and secondary outcomes," the authors wrote, noting that the
effects were stable at 2 years and were significant at all
follow-up periods.
At 2 years, surgery showed a treatment effect of 18.1 for
Short Form-36 (SF-36) bodily pain scores, an effect of 18.3 for
physical function and an effect of –16.7 for the Oswestry
Disability Index, according to the study.
"The as-treated treatment effects at 2 years were nearly
identical in the randomized and the observational cohorts," the
authors noted.
Surgery showed a treatment effect on SF-36 bodily pain scores
of 17.8 for the randomized group and 18.5 for the observational
group. The treatment effect on SF-36 physical function was 16.7
for the randomized group and 19.9 for the observational group.
The effect on Oswestry Disability Index scores was –15.9 for the
randomized group and –17.7 for the observational group,
according to the study.
For more information:
Weinstein JN, Luri JD, Tosteson TD, et al. Surgical
versus nonsurgical treatment for lumbar degenerative
spondylolisthesis. N Engl J Med.
2007;356:2257-2270.
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