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Validation and Analysis of a Multi-site MIS Prospective Registry Through Sub-analysis of an MIS TLIF Subgroup

STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective analysis of multi-site, prospectively collected database. OBJECTIVE: To assess the validity and utility of a prospective spine registry by sub-analysis of patients treated with MIS TLIF. BACKGROUND: The MIS registry is a large-scale, multi-center series of prospectively c...

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Autores principales: Sclafani, Joseph A., Raiszadeh, Kamshad, Raiszadeh, Ramin, Kim, Paul, Doerr, Todd, Siddiqi, Farhan, LaMotta, Ivan, Park, Paul, Templin, Cary, Gill, Sandeep, Liang, Kevin, Kim, Choll W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Society for the Advancement of Spine Surgery 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4325489/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25694921
http://dx.doi.org/10.14444/1004
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author Sclafani, Joseph A.
Raiszadeh, Kamshad
Raiszadeh, Ramin
Kim, Paul
Doerr, Todd
Siddiqi, Farhan
LaMotta, Ivan
Park, Paul
Templin, Cary
Gill, Sandeep
Liang, Kevin
Kim, Choll W.
author_facet Sclafani, Joseph A.
Raiszadeh, Kamshad
Raiszadeh, Ramin
Kim, Paul
Doerr, Todd
Siddiqi, Farhan
LaMotta, Ivan
Park, Paul
Templin, Cary
Gill, Sandeep
Liang, Kevin
Kim, Choll W.
author_sort Sclafani, Joseph A.
collection PubMed
description STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective analysis of multi-site, prospectively collected database. OBJECTIVE: To assess the validity and utility of a prospective spine registry by sub-analysis of patients treated with MIS TLIF. BACKGROUND: The MIS registry is a large-scale, multi-center series of prospectively collected clinical information on outcomes, complications, and adverse events for minimally invasive spine procedures for the treatment of degenerative lumbar conditions. METHODS: Analysis was performed on the MIS Prospective Registry database. A subgroup of patients treated by MIS TLIF technique was identified. Statistical analyses were performed on pre and post-operative data collected using validated health related quality of life outcome tools. Missing 1-year patient follow-up data was obtained through progressive correspondence modalities. RESULTS: Data analysis was performed on 98 MIS TLIF patients (56 female, 42 male) with a median age of 64.5 years (range 25-91 years) which were extracted from a total registry population of 478 patients. The one year follow-up rate was 87%. A total of 64 single-level, 23 two-level, 3 three-level, and 3 combined TLIFs staged with an MIS lateral procedure were included. The primary surgical indications were spondylolisthesis (27%), central stenosis (25%), foraminal stenosis (14%), post-laminectomy syndrome (14%) and degenerative scoliosis (6%). The peri-operative blood transfusion rate was 3%. Complications included intraoperative dural tear (n = 3), deep wound infection (n = 2), superficial dehiscence/cellulitis (n = 2). There was a 4% re-operation rate at the 1 year post-operative time point. Half of patients were discharged within 2 days (range 1-11 days, mean 2.97 days, median 2 days). All patients that were discharged on the first post-operative day (n = 14) underwent a single-level MIS TLIF procedure and had significantly lower pre-op disability index score than those discharged on POD 3-5 (43.7 ± 15.5 vs. 56.0 ± 18.3, p = 0.04). Average ODI scores in the subgroup of patients that had reached the one year postoperative time point were 46.5 pre-op (n = 46), and 26.2 at 1 year post-op (n = 40, p = 0.0001). There was significant improvement in VAS scores: pre-operative (back = 6.7, leg = 5.4, n = 46), and 1 year post-operative (back = 3.2, leg = 1.7, n = 40, p = 0.0001). Patients with pre-operative ODI scores greater than 50 demonstrated significant improvement starting at the 6 week post-operative time point (24 point improvement, n = 46, p < 0.001). A pre-operative ODI between 35-50 showed significant improvement starting at 3 months (15.5 point improvement, n = 29, p = 0.05). Patients with a pre-operative ODI score less than 35 had an initial period of increased disability with a trend towards significant improvement by 3 months post-op (n = 20). CONCLUSIONS: Initial findings of the MIS Prospective Registry show patients can be enrolled in a relatively short time period and patient based questionnaires can successfully be obtained through a combination of clinic follow-up appointments and remote correspondence. Outcomes of the MIS Registry MIS TLIF subgroup were consistent with previously published MIS TLIF studies. Sub-analysis of data collected through level-specific patient diagnosis and treatment modalities permits outcome analysis of a wide breadth of spinal conditions and interventions.
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spelling pubmed-43254892015-02-18 Validation and Analysis of a Multi-site MIS Prospective Registry Through Sub-analysis of an MIS TLIF Subgroup Sclafani, Joseph A. Raiszadeh, Kamshad Raiszadeh, Ramin Kim, Paul Doerr, Todd Siddiqi, Farhan LaMotta, Ivan Park, Paul Templin, Cary Gill, Sandeep Liang, Kevin Kim, Choll W. Int J Spine Surg Article STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective analysis of multi-site, prospectively collected database. OBJECTIVE: To assess the validity and utility of a prospective spine registry by sub-analysis of patients treated with MIS TLIF. BACKGROUND: The MIS registry is a large-scale, multi-center series of prospectively collected clinical information on outcomes, complications, and adverse events for minimally invasive spine procedures for the treatment of degenerative lumbar conditions. METHODS: Analysis was performed on the MIS Prospective Registry database. A subgroup of patients treated by MIS TLIF technique was identified. Statistical analyses were performed on pre and post-operative data collected using validated health related quality of life outcome tools. Missing 1-year patient follow-up data was obtained through progressive correspondence modalities. RESULTS: Data analysis was performed on 98 MIS TLIF patients (56 female, 42 male) with a median age of 64.5 years (range 25-91 years) which were extracted from a total registry population of 478 patients. The one year follow-up rate was 87%. A total of 64 single-level, 23 two-level, 3 three-level, and 3 combined TLIFs staged with an MIS lateral procedure were included. The primary surgical indications were spondylolisthesis (27%), central stenosis (25%), foraminal stenosis (14%), post-laminectomy syndrome (14%) and degenerative scoliosis (6%). The peri-operative blood transfusion rate was 3%. Complications included intraoperative dural tear (n = 3), deep wound infection (n = 2), superficial dehiscence/cellulitis (n = 2). There was a 4% re-operation rate at the 1 year post-operative time point. Half of patients were discharged within 2 days (range 1-11 days, mean 2.97 days, median 2 days). All patients that were discharged on the first post-operative day (n = 14) underwent a single-level MIS TLIF procedure and had significantly lower pre-op disability index score than those discharged on POD 3-5 (43.7 ± 15.5 vs. 56.0 ± 18.3, p = 0.04). Average ODI scores in the subgroup of patients that had reached the one year postoperative time point were 46.5 pre-op (n = 46), and 26.2 at 1 year post-op (n = 40, p = 0.0001). There was significant improvement in VAS scores: pre-operative (back = 6.7, leg = 5.4, n = 46), and 1 year post-operative (back = 3.2, leg = 1.7, n = 40, p = 0.0001). Patients with pre-operative ODI scores greater than 50 demonstrated significant improvement starting at the 6 week post-operative time point (24 point improvement, n = 46, p < 0.001). A pre-operative ODI between 35-50 showed significant improvement starting at 3 months (15.5 point improvement, n = 29, p = 0.05). Patients with a pre-operative ODI score less than 35 had an initial period of increased disability with a trend towards significant improvement by 3 months post-op (n = 20). CONCLUSIONS: Initial findings of the MIS Prospective Registry show patients can be enrolled in a relatively short time period and patient based questionnaires can successfully be obtained through a combination of clinic follow-up appointments and remote correspondence. Outcomes of the MIS Registry MIS TLIF subgroup were consistent with previously published MIS TLIF studies. Sub-analysis of data collected through level-specific patient diagnosis and treatment modalities permits outcome analysis of a wide breadth of spinal conditions and interventions. International Society for the Advancement of Spine Surgery 2014-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC4325489/ /pubmed/25694921 http://dx.doi.org/10.14444/1004 Text en Copyright © 2014 ISASS - International Society for the Advancement of Spine Surgery http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License, permitting all non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Sclafani, Joseph A.
Raiszadeh, Kamshad
Raiszadeh, Ramin
Kim, Paul
Doerr, Todd
Siddiqi, Farhan
LaMotta, Ivan
Park, Paul
Templin, Cary
Gill, Sandeep
Liang, Kevin
Kim, Choll W.
Validation and Analysis of a Multi-site MIS Prospective Registry Through Sub-analysis of an MIS TLIF Subgroup
title Validation and Analysis of a Multi-site MIS Prospective Registry Through Sub-analysis of an MIS TLIF Subgroup
title_full Validation and Analysis of a Multi-site MIS Prospective Registry Through Sub-analysis of an MIS TLIF Subgroup
title_fullStr Validation and Analysis of a Multi-site MIS Prospective Registry Through Sub-analysis of an MIS TLIF Subgroup
title_full_unstemmed Validation and Analysis of a Multi-site MIS Prospective Registry Through Sub-analysis of an MIS TLIF Subgroup
title_short Validation and Analysis of a Multi-site MIS Prospective Registry Through Sub-analysis of an MIS TLIF Subgroup
title_sort validation and analysis of a multi-site mis prospective registry through sub-analysis of an mis tlif subgroup
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4325489/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25694921
http://dx.doi.org/10.14444/1004
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