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Effects of fusion and conservative treatment on disc degeneration and rates of subsequent surgery after thoracolumbar fracture.

Authors :
D'Oro A
Spoonamore MJ
Cohen JR
Acosta FL
Hsieh PC
Liu JC
Chen TC
Buser Z
Wang JC
Source :
Journal of neurosurgery. Spine [J Neurosurg Spine] 2016 Mar; Vol. 24 (3), pp. 476-82. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Dec 04.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Object: The objective of this study was to compare the incidence of degeneration and need for subsequent fusion surgery between patients who were treated nonsurgically and patients treated with fusion after a diagnosis of thoracic-or lumbar-level fracture without degenerative disease.<br />Methods: The authors performed a retrospective study of Orthopedic United Healthcare patients diagnosed with thoracic or lumbar fracture. Patients were filtered into thoracic and lumbar fracture groups using diagnostic codes and then assigned to one of 2 treatment subgroups (fusion surgery or no surgery) on the basis of procedural codes. Disc degeneration and follow-up surgery were recorded. Chi-square statistical analysis was used.<br />Results: Of 3699 patients diagnosed with a thoracic fracture, 117 (3.2%) underwent thoracic fusion and 3215 (86.9%) were treated nonsurgically. Within 3 years, 147 (4.6%) patients from the nonsurgical subgroup and fewer than 11 (0.9%-8.5%) from the fusion subgroup were diagnosed with thoracic disc degeneration. From the nonsurgical subgroup, 11 (0.3%) patients underwent a thoracic surgery related to disc degeneration compared with zero from the fusion group (p > 0.05). Of 5016 patients diagnosed with lumbar fracture, 150 (3.0%) underwent fusion and 4371 (87.1%) had no surgery. Within 3 years, 503 patients (11.5%) from the nonsurgical subgroup and 35 (23.3%) from the fusion subgroup were diagnosed with lumbar disc degeneration (p < 0.05). From the nonsurgical subgroup, 42 (1.0%) went on to have surgery related to disc degeneration, compared with fewer than 11 (0.7%-6.7%) from the fusion subgroup (values not precise due to privacy limitations).<br />Conclusions: Fusion surgery for thoracic fracture does not appear to increase the likelihood of undergoing future surgery. In the lumbar region, initial fusion surgery appears to increase the incidence of disc degeneration and could potentially necessitate future surgeries.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1547-5646
Volume :
24
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of neurosurgery. Spine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26637065
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3171/2015.7.SPINE15442