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Clinical Trial Summary

Degenerative spondylolisthesis is a common spinal degenerative disease. It is defined as the slippage of one vertebrae on the vertebrae bellow. In the process of spinal ageing and spinal joint degeneration, the spine becomes subjected to degenerative development that results in joint instability, shifting of vertebrae and can be responsible for a progressive kyphosis of the lumbar spine and sagittal imbalance with forward inclination of the trunk and chronic low back pain development. To address these changes and restore stability, lumbar spinal fusion has been developed and is nowadays a common procedure for unstable degenerative spine disorders. In the past several years, studies that highlight the importance of sagittal balance analysis with the restoration of adequate lumbar lordosis, have emerged. However, it remains a challenge to determine the correct amount of lumbar lordosis that is required for each patient to maintain optimal post-fusion sagittal balance. Additionally, the relationship between pelvic incidence (PI) and impact of LL correction has been highlighted in literature. The position of fused vertebrae is of paramount importance, as sagittal alignment should be done with minimizing muscle work during posture. Failure to reach proper sagittal balance can result in compensatory mechanisms such as increased pelvic tilt (PT), cervical and thoracic segment hyperextension, and knee flexion. These compensatory mechanisms have adverse effects such as chronic pain, disability and muscle fatigue. With this study the investigators aim to analyze long-term clinical and spinopelvic radiographic parameter outcomes of patients who underwent a one-level spinal fusion procedure for single level degenerative spondylolisthesis disease at a single institution.


Clinical Trial Description

TLIF (transforaminal interbody fusion) is a safe and effective treatment option for single-level lumbar degenerative disease. It is less invasive, yields good outcomes and has fewer complications after long-term follow up compared to other fusion techniques. In literature, many studies have compared sagittal parameters and functional outcomes in single-level TLIF surgery. In most literature reports, however, the fusion was performed at different lumbar levels, depending on the characteristics of the studied cohort. As demonstrated by Roussouly et. al. in the asymptomatic population, the L4 vertebra represents the apex of lumbar lordosis and is the most suitable site for lordosis correction. There are several reported surgical techniques and methods to obtain adequate lordosis correction during TLIF. At Department of Orthopaedic surgery of Ljubljana University medical centre, TLIF is performed using a consistent brand of instrumentation. In knee-chest position, polyaxial pedicle screws (Xia®, Stryker Spine, Allendale, NJ, USA), combined with a crescent-shaped interbody cage (T-Plus®, Pioneer Surgical Technology, Marquette, MI, USA), bilateral facet joint removal and laminectomy on both sides are used. Compression over the rods is performed to obtain adequate segmental lordosis. The angle of lordosis correction is calculated according Schwab's formula (ideal lumbar lordosis (LL) = pelvic incidence (PI) + 9). There is little published information regarding cohorts with long-term evaluation. As many authors suggested, changes in lordotic parameters can become clinically evident several years after the procedure. With this study's cohort analysis, a rarely reported link between spinopelvic parameters and long-term clinical evaluation will be demonstrated. Selected participants will be analyzed using the same protocol as preoperatively. A clinical examination will be made, ODI questionnaires will be administered and radiographic parameters on full-standing lateral radiographs, will be analyzed. Changes between preoperative and long-term postoperative parameters will be calculated and compared. For statistical analysis paired t-test and Pearson correlation will be used. All statistical tests will be two tailed and significance will be set at p<0.05. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04174144
Study type Observational
Source University Medical Centre Ljubljana
Contact
Status Completed
Phase
Start date December 12, 2019
Completion date June 23, 2023

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