A combined prospective cohort study and retrospective analysis of previously collected data. Three different techniques for posterior lumbar interbody fusion (PLIF) are compared: CBT-PLIF, MI-PLIF and open PLIF. A total of 180 patients are included, who will be followed up to 6 weeks postoperatively.
A combined prospective cohort study for CBT-PLIF and retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data from the MISOS study, regarding traditional open PLIF and MI-PLIF. A total of 180 patients will be included in the study: 60 prospective CBT-PLIF patients, 60 retrospective open PLIF patients and 60 retrospective MI-PLIF patients. The new data will be collected prospectively by means of questionnaires. No biomaterial will be collected. The included patients will be asked to complete questionnaires before surgery, 2 and 6 weeks after surgery. In addition, VAS scores will be noted throughout the hospital stay, 2 and 6 weeks after surgery. Inclusion criteria: Patients aged 18-75 years with neurogenic claudication and/or radicular leg pain due to low-grade (Meyerding grades l and ll) degenerative or spondylolytic spondylolisthesis with persistent symptoms for more than 3 months. Exclusion criteria: previous spinal fusion surgery at the same level, osteoporosis (only when using bisphosphonate), active infection or previous infection at the surgical site, active cancer, spondylolisthesis grade III or greater, more than one symptomatic level requiring fusion, pregnancy, contraindication to surgery, severe mental or psychiatric disorder, substance abuse, insufficient knowledge of the Dutch language and morbid obesity (body mass index \>40). Main research question: Does the CBT-PLIF provide less low back pain in the short term than the traditional open PLIF and the MI-PLIF? Primary outcome measure * Low back pain measured with the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) 2 weeks after surgery Secondary Outcomes * Low back pain during hospitalization (measured every day), 2 and 6 weeks after surgery * Leg pain * Oswestry Disability Index * Quality of life (EQ-5D-5L) * Observed patient recovery * Other parameters such as complications, surgical parameters (intraoperative blood loss, duration of surgery), length of stay in hospital and return to work
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
180
Spinal fusion in the lumbar spine by inserting a cage directly into the disc space. This is an observational study in which the standard procedure/care is followed.
UMCG
Groningen, Netherlands
RECRUITINGVAS low back pain
VAS for low back pain ranging from 0mm (no pain) to 100mm (worst pain imaginable)
Time frame: 2 weeks postoperative
VAS low back pain
VAS for low back pain ranging from 0mm (no pain) to 100mm (worst pain imaginable)
Time frame: During hospital stay, measured each day and 6 weeks postoperative
VAS leg pain
VAS for leg pain ranging from 0mm (no pain) to 100mm (worst pain imaginable)
Time frame: During hospital stay, measured each day, 2 and 6 weeks postoperative
Oswestry Disability Index
Used to quantify the degree of functional impairment in patients with low back pain. Ranging from 0 (no disability) to 100 (bed bound)
Time frame: 2 and 6 weeks postoperative
Quality of Life (QoL)
Measured by the EQ-5D-5L
Time frame: 2 and 6 weeks postoperative
Perceived recovery of the patient
scored on a 7-Likert scale, with scores ranging from 'worse than ever' to 'complete recovery'
Time frame: 2 and 6 weeks postoperative
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