This prospective study addresses one of the most controversial topics in the treatment of cervical spine trauma: the management of type II odontoid process fractures in the elderly. It is the hypothesis that surgical treatment will result in improved functional outcome measures, neck pain and mortality rates as compared with nonsurgical management. Furthermore, it is hypothesized that surgical treatment of odontoid process fractures will limit hospital re-admissions and development of medical complications secondary to prolonged immobilization in a cervical orthosis and delayed surgery related to late fracture displacement, which are often associated with non-operative care. Additionally, data from this study will be useful in identifying patient-specific predictors of improved outcome which can be used to optimize treatment algorithms and more effectively counsel patients who sustain these injuries.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
200
Treatment arm #1 (8 weeks of post-injury bracing with rigid cervical collar): Participants randomized to this treatment arm will be treated with 8 weeks in a rigid cervical collar.
Treatment arm #2 (posterior C1-2 instrumented fusion): Participants randomized to this treatment arm will undergo posterior C1-2 instrumented fusion with either local bone grafting or autologous iliac crest bone grafting with or without allograft bone grafting. Bone grafting decision will be made by the treating surgeon. All remaining decisions surrounding medical and surgical care will be made by the attending spine surgeon involved in each case.
Rothman Institute
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
neck disability
Measured by validated outcome measure NDI (Neck Disability Index)
Time frame: 6 months post randomization
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