Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 Spinal fusion not much better than intensive rehab for chronic low back pain Rheumawire May 26, 2005 Janis Oxford, UK - Lumbar fusion as a treatment for chronic low back pain has become more common in the past decade, but both the rationale and the techniques used have been challenged. Sorting out the facts about spinal-fusion surgery was made a priority by the UK National Health Service in 1994, and a multicenter, randomized trial done in 15 UK hospitals has now been reported online May 23, 2005 in the BMJ by Dr Fairbank on behalf of the Spine Stabilisation Trial Group [1]. This report is accompanied by a cost-benefit analysis on the same population by Dr Oliver Rivero-Arias and colleagues [2]. According to Fairbank, " No clear evidence emerged that primary spinal-fusion surgery was any more beneficial than intensive rehabilitation. " Rivero-Arias adds, " Two-year follow-up data show that surgical stabilization of the spine may not be a cost-effective use of scarce healthcare resources. However, sensitivity analyses show that this could changefor example, if the proportion of rehabilitation patients requiring subsequent surgery continues to increase. " Little difference in outcomes with surgery vs rehab The trial randomized over 300 patients who were considered to be candidates for spinal-fusion surgery because they had chronic low back pain despite conventional medical management (median duration of pain eight years [range 1-35]). Patients were randomized to surgery (n=176) or to intensive rehabilitation (n=173). The local surgeon chose the type of spinal stabilization used. The rehab program included a three-week paced exercise program, hydrotherapy, and " education based on principles of cognitive behavior therapy. " Patients were followed for 24 months. The main objective of the Fairbank study was " to determine whether surgical stabilization of the spine (by fusion or flexible stabilization) was more or less effective at achieving worthwhile relief of symptoms over a two-year period than an intensive rehabilitation program based on principles of cognitive behavior therapy. " The primary outcome measures at 24 months were the Oswestry low back pain disability index (ODI) and the shuttle-walking test of walking speed and endurance. Secondary outcomes included the Short Form 36 general health questionnaire (SF-36), the distress and risk assessment method (DRAM), assessment of complications, and work status. The Oswestry scores improved in both groups over the two-year period but improved slightly more in the surgery group (a difference of 4.1 points, p=0.045). The study (designed in 1995) was powered to detect a four-point difference on the Oswestry scale, but Fairbank tells rheumawire that this difference now appears too small to be clinically meaningful. " Others suggest a minimal change for an individual following an intervention of between 12 and 15 points on the ODI and for a group of between 6 and 10 points, " he says. There were no significant differences between surgery and rehabilitation for any of the other primary or secondary outcome measures, except that 19 surgical cases had intraoperative complications and 11 surgery patients required further operations on their lumbar spine during the follow-up period. " If you were the patient with chronic low back pain, which treatment would you go for? " Fairbank asks. " Above all, rehabilitation needs to be offered by a surgeon (or rheumatologist) with encouragement, and not by one who says, 'See you later for the fusion.' " Many more of the patients randomized to rehabilitation later crossed over to surgery within the two-year study period than vice versa (28% vs 4%). However, Fairbank puts this into perspective: " This was a pragmatic trial of a population of patients considered candidates for fusion. Thus, 100% were prepared to have an operation at the time of consent. Only 28% chose to have a fusion after rehab, " he says. As might be expected, intensive rehabilitation was much less costly than surgery (1615 pounds vs 7610 pounds). At two years of follow-up, overall costs averaged 4526 pounds for each rehabilitation patient vs 7830 pounds for each spinal fusion patient (p<0.001). The measure health economists use to determine whether a new procedure is " worth it " is typically some form of the " quality-adjusted life-year " (QALY), which estimates how much would have to be spent on all such procedures to gain a single additional year of good-quality life for a single patient. In the UK that amount is 30 000 pounds. In the US, it is about $50,000. " Reading off from the cost-effectiveness acceptability curve suggests that there is less than a 20% chance that surgery will be cost-effective. This is what we used as the basis for the conclusion that surgery is unlikely to be a cost-effective use of healthcare resources at two years, when compared with intensive rehabilitation, " coauthor Dr Helen tells rheumawire. " [Our] results should encourage surgeons to refer patients to rehabilitation 'with enthusiasm,' rather than implying that they will see them back when they have finished their rehab. " " Strong evidence that these programs should be reinstated " Fairbank also views the data as " evidence to encourage patients to embark on rehab and a weapon for the doctor to demand funding for this treatment from insurers. " Gaining access to and reimbursement for such intensive rehabilitation remains a problem both in the US and in the UK. Fairbank says that in most cases, the programs were set up in community hospitals just for the trial. " Many elements of this approach were used in the military (especially the Royal Air Force) from the time of World War II, " Fairbank says. " These programs had been removed from many hospitals for economic reasons. We believe this trial provides strong evidence that these programs should be reinstated (a situation that is also present in the US, I believe). " Sources 1. Fairbank J, Frost H, -Mac J, et al. Randomized and controlled trial to compare surgical stabilization of the lumbar spine with an intensive rehabilitation programme for patients with chronic low back pain: the MRC spine stabilisation trial. Brit Med J 2005; DOI:10.1136/bmj.38441.620417.8F. 2. Rivero-Arias O, H, Gray A, et al. Surgical stabilization of the spine compared with a programme of intensive rehabilitation for the management of patients with chronic low back pain: cost utility analysis based o a randomized controlled trial. Brit Med J 2005; DOI:10.1136/bmj.38441.429618.8F. Not an MD I'll tell you where to go! Mayo Clinic in Rochester http://www.mayoclinic.org/rochester s Hopkins Medicine http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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