Back to Search Start Over

Durable Responses at 24 Months With High-Frequency Spinal Cord Stimulation for Nonsurgical Refractory Back Pain

Authors :
Patel, Naresh P.
Jameson, Jessica
Johnson, Curtis
Kloster, Daniel
Calodney, Aaron
Kosek, Peter
Pilitsis, Julie
Bendel, Markus
Petersen, Erika
Wu, Chengyuan
Cherry, Taissa
Lad, Shivanand
Yu, Cong
Sayed, Dawood
Goree, Johnathan
Lyons, Mark K.
Sack, Andrew
Bruce, Diana
Bharara, Manish
Province-Azalde, Rose
Caraway, David
Kapural, Leonardo
Patel, Naresh P.
Jameson, Jessica
Johnson, Curtis
Kloster, Daniel
Calodney, Aaron
Kosek, Peter
Pilitsis, Julie
Bendel, Markus
Petersen, Erika
Wu, Chengyuan
Cherry, Taissa
Lad, Shivanand
Yu, Cong
Sayed, Dawood
Goree, Johnathan
Lyons, Mark K.
Sack, Andrew
Bruce, Diana
Bharara, Manish
Province-Azalde, Rose
Caraway, David
Kapural, Leonardo
Source :
Department of Neurosurgery Faculty Papers
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to evaluate the 24-month durability of pain relief, function, quality of life, and safety outcomes for patients with nonsurgical refractory back pain (NSRBP) treated with high-frequency spinal cord stimulation (SCS) within a large, national, multicenter randomized controlled trial (RCT). METHODS: Following the completion of an RCT comparing high-frequency SCS plus CMM with CMM alone for the treatment of NSRBP, patients gave additional consent for a follow-up extension to 24 months. Presented is the cohort analysis of all patients treated with high-frequency SCS following the optional crossover at 6 months. The outcomes assessed to 24 months included responder rate of ≥ 50% pain relief measured according to the visual analog scale [VAS]), disability (Oswestry Disability Index [ODI]), quality of life (EQ-5D 5-level [EQ-5D-5L]), opioid reduction. RESULTS: Of the 125 patients who received a permanent implant, 121 completed the 12-month follow-up, 101 gave additional consent for extended follow-up, and 98 completed the 24-month follow-up. At 24 months after implantation, the mean back pain VAS score was reduced by 73% and the responder rate was 82%. ODI and EQ-5D-5L both improved by at least double the minimal clinically important difference for each measure. No unexpected adverse events were observed, and the rates of serious adverse events (3.4%) and device explantations (4.8%) were low. CONCLUSIONS: The addition of high-frequency SCS to CMM in patients with NSRBP offers profound improvements at 24 months in pain, function, quality of life, and reduced opioid use. This study provides much-needed evidence to inform current clinical practice for managing patients with NSRBP.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Department of Neurosurgery Faculty Papers
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1435581918
Document Type :
Electronic Resource