Spine surgery
yields greater benefits over nonsurgical
treatments
Newswise — A research
study by orthopedic spine, back and neck
surgeon at Rush University Medical Center
Dr. Howard An and colleagues found that
patients who underwent surgery for spinal
stenosis showed significantly more
improvement in all primary outcomes than did
patients who were treated nonsurgically.
The study findings were
published in the New England Journal of
Medicine, February 21.
Spinal stenosis
involves a narrowing of a passage in the
spine through which nerves pass, and it can
result in a debilitating pain in the lower
back, hips and legs.
The surgical solution
involves enlarging the opening to relieve
the pressure on the nerves, in an operation
called a laminectomy, one of the most common
operations performed in the U.S.
The study results come
from the Spine Patient Outcomes Research
Trial sponsored by the National Institutes
of Health that involved about 654 patients
at 13 treatment centers across the country.
Rush was the only medical center in Illinois
involved in the study.
The study followed 654
surgical candidate patients with a history
of at least 12 weeks of symptoms and spinal
stenosis, of whom 398 ultimately received
decompressive surgery.
After two years, 63
percent of those who had surgery said they
had a major improvement in their condition,
compared with 29 percent among those who got
nonsurgical treatment.
In terms of
self-reported pain and function, both groups
improved over the two-year period, though
the final scores for patient who had surgery
were in the 60-point range, while scores for
those who stuck with nonsurgical treatments,
such as physical therapy, were in the low
40s.
The study separated
patients who stuck with their random
assignment to surgery or nonsurgery options.
The randomized patients’ results were very
similar to those who selected one course or
the other.