Spondylolisthesis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Clinical Evidence of Robot Guided vs. Navigated vs. Free Hand Lumbar Spinal Fusion
Computer-based navigation systems were first introduced to spine surgery in 1995 and while
they have been long established as standards in certain cranial procedures, they have not
been similarly adopted in spine surgery. Designed to overcome some of the limitations of
navigation-based technologies, robot-guided surgical systems have become commercially
available to surgeons worldwide.These systems are rapidly challenging the gold standards.
The aim is to conduct a prospective randomized controlled trial. The randomized variable will
be the screw placement technique used. One arm will be treated with lumbar fusion using
robotic guidance (RG), one arm will receive the same procedure but with a free hand technique
(FH) and the third arm will use navigation (NV) (CT or Fluoroscopy-assisted). Intraoperative
screw revisions and revision surgery for screw malposition as well as clinical
patient-reported outcomes to identify any such differences between these methods of screw
insertion will be assessed.
A decade ago, minimally invasive surgery (MIS) was considered a promising development in
spine surgery, yet the value of the pioneering technologies was questionable. With the
growing number of experienced MIS surgeons, the influx of evidence in favour of MIS is
rapidly increasing. This makes a compelling argument towards MIS offering distinct clinical
benefits over open approaches in terms of blood loss, length of stay, rehabilitation,
cost-effectiveness and perioperative patient comfort. Due to the limited or inexistent
line-of-sight in MIS procedures, surgeons need to rely on imaging, navigation, and guidance
technologies to operate in a safe and efficient manner. Therefore, a plethora of new and ever
improving navigational systems have been developed. These systems allow a consistent level of
safety and accuracy, on par with results achieved by very experienced free hand surgeons,
with a reasonably short learning curve.
Computer-based navigation systems were first introduced to spine surgery in 1995 and while
they have been long established as standards in certain cranial procedures, they have not
been similarly adopted in spine surgery. Designed to overcome some of the limitations of
navigation-based technologies, robot-guided surgery has become commercially available to
surgeons worldwide, like SpineAssist® (Mazor Robotics Ltd. Caesarea, Israel) and the recently
launched ROSA™ Spine (Zimmer-Biomet, Warsaw, Indiana, USA). These systems are rapidly
challenging the gold standards.
SpineAssist®, and its upgraded version, the Renaissance®, provides a stable drilling platform
and restricts the surgeon's natural full range of motion to 2 degrees of freedom (up/down
motion and yaw in the cannula). The system's guidance unit moves into the trajectory based on
exact preoperative planning of pedicle screws, while accounting for changes in intervertebral
relationships such as due to distraction, cage insertion or changes between the supine
patient position in the preoperative CT and the prone patient on the operating table.
Published evidence on robot-guided screw placement has demonstrated high levels of accuracy
with most reports ranging around 98% of screws placed within the pedicle or with a cortical
encroachment of less than 2 mm.
Although the reliability and accuracy of robot-guided spine surgery have been established,
the actual benefits for the patient in terms of clinical outcomes and revision surgeries
remain unknown.
The investigators recently conducted a cohort study that showed some evidence that robotic
guidance lowers the rate of intraoperative screw revisions and implant related reoperations
compared to free hand procedures, while achieving comparable clinical outcomes. Now, these
factors, among others, have to be assessed on a higher level of evidence. This would be, to
date, the first randomized controlled trial comparing clinical patient reported outcomes of
robotic guided (RG) pedicle screw placement vs. navigated (NV) vs. free hand (FH) pedicle
screw placement.
The investigator's aim is to conduct a prospective randomized controlled trial. The
randomized variable will be the screw placement technique used. One arm will be treated with
lumbar fusion using robotic guidance (RG), one arm will receive the same procedure but with a
free hand technique (FH) and the third arm will use navigation (NV) (CT or
Fluoroscopy-assisted).
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