Long-term Treatment Effects of Lumbar Arthrodeses in Degenerative Disk Disease: A Systematic Review With Meta-Analysis

Systematic review with meta-analysis. To (1) evaluate long-term patient-centered clinical outcomes after lumbar arthrodesis with or without decompression for lumbar spondylosis (LS); and (2) compare these outcomes with those of alternative treatments, including nonsurgical and surgical which maintai...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of spinal disorders & techniques 2015-11, Vol.28 (9), p.E493-E521
Hauptverfasser: Noshchenko, Andriy, Hoffecker, Lilian, Lindley, Emily M, Burger, Evalina L, Cain, Christopher M J, Patel, Vikas V
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container_end_page E521
container_issue 9
container_start_page E493
container_title Journal of spinal disorders & techniques
container_volume 28
creator Noshchenko, Andriy
Hoffecker, Lilian
Lindley, Emily M
Burger, Evalina L
Cain, Christopher M J
Patel, Vikas V
description Systematic review with meta-analysis. To (1) evaluate long-term patient-centered clinical outcomes after lumbar arthrodesis with or without decompression for lumbar spondylosis (LS); and (2) compare these outcomes with those of alternative treatments, including nonsurgical and surgical which maintain mobility of the lumbar spine. The effective treatment of LS is a complex clinical and economic concern for patients and health care providers. (1) randomized controlled clinical trials (RCTs) comparing treatment effects of lumbar arthrodesis with other interventions; (2) participants: skeletally mature adults with lumbar degenerative disk disease. Ovid MEDLINE, Embase, the Cochrane Library, and others. All years through February of 2013 were included. Patient-centered clinical outcomes before treatment, at 12, 24, or >24 months of follow-up, and rate of complications and additional surgical treatment were collected. A meta-analysis was performed to evaluate pooled treatment effects. The GRADE approach was applied to evaluate the level of evidence. The review included 38 studies of 5738 participants. All studies showed strong or at least moderate treatment effects of lumbar arthrodesis at 12, 24, and 48-72 months of follow-up. The level of evidence was moderate at 12 and 24 months, and low at 48-72 months. The pooled long-term treatment effect of lumbar arthrodesis exceeded those of: nonsurgical treatment (P
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subjects Arthrodesis - methods
Humans
Intervertebral Disc Degeneration - surgery
Low Back Pain - etiology
Patient Outcome Assessment
Publication Bias
Surveys and Questionnaires
Time Factors
Treatment Outcome
title Long-term Treatment Effects of Lumbar Arthrodeses in Degenerative Disk Disease: A Systematic Review With Meta-Analysis
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