Short-segment fusion versus isolated decompression in lumbar spinal canal stenosis patients with Cobb angles over 20°.

Journal: The Spine Journal : Official Journal Of The North American Spine Society
Published:
Abstract

Background: Lumbar decompression and short-segment lumbar fusion are standard procedures for short-segment lumbar canal stenosis, even in patients with moderate Cobb angles. Adult degenerative scoliosis is diagnosed at a threshold of 10°, and patients with coronal Cobb angles over 30° are recommended for long fusion due to global spinal deformity. However, there is a lack of research on clinical outcomes in patients with moderate coronal deformity, such as Cobb angles between 20° and 30°.

Objective: This study aims to investigate the radiographic and clinical outcome differences between isolated decompression and short-segment interbody fusion for lumbar spinal canal stenosis in patients with moderate coronal deformity.

Methods: A retrospective analysis of a prospectively collected registry. Methods: Patients with Cobb angle exceeding 20° who underwent 1- or 2- levels of lumbar surgery for lumbar canal stenosis. Patients diagnosed as spinal deformity were excluded. Methods: Patient-reported outcomes included Oswestry Disability Index (ODI), VAS back, VAS leg, Short form 12 physical component score (SF-12 PCS) and Mental Component Score (SF-12 MCS), and patient-reported outcomes measurement information system physical function (PROMIS-PF) at preoperative, 12-week postoperative, and 1-year postoperative timepoints. Preoperative and postoperative spinopelvic alignment was assessed using Cobb angle, pelvic tilt, sacral slope, pelvic incidence, lumbar lordosis and PI minus LL. Methods: A propensity score-matched analysis with the overlap weighting was utilized to investigate patient-reported outcomes at 12-week and 1-year postoperatively between the surgery groups. Spinopelvic alignments were compared between preoperative and 1-year postoperative timepoint using a linear mixed-effect model.

Results: Before overlap weighting, the two surgery groups showed significant differences in age and diagnosis. No obvious sagittal malalignment was observed (PI minus LL: decompression, 7.4° vs fusion, 11.5°). After propensity score weighting, the fusion groups exhibited significantly better ODI and VAS back at the 1-year timepoint (ODI: fusion, 16.6 vs decompression, 28.1, p=.013; VAS back: fusion, 1.5±2.1 vs decompression, 3.7±1.9, p<.001). Radiographic assessment showed that the fusion group achieved better PI minus LL compared to decompression group (15° vs 10°, p=.008).

Conclusions: In patients with degenerative scoliosis and a Cobb angle greater than 20°, short-segment lumbar fusion surgery may result in enhanced improvement for short-segment lumbar pathology compared to isolated decompression.

Authors
Tomoyuki Asada, Chad Simon, Atahan Durbas, Myles R Allen, Kevin Disilvestro, Takashi Hirase, Nishtha Singh, Patawut Bovonratwet, Annika Bay, Tejas Subramanian, Eric Mai, Yeo Kim, Maximillian Korsun, Olivia Tuma, Kasra Araghi, Joshua Zhang, Eric Kim, Cole Kwas, Amy Lu, Avani Vaishnav, James Dowdell, Evan Sheha, Sheeraz Qureshi, Sravisht Iyer