Lumbar Spinal Stenosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Clinical Study Comparing Dynamic Stabilization of the Lumbar Spine With the Stabilimax NZ® Dynamic Spine Stabilization System to Posterolateral Instrumented Fusion - In Patients With Lumbar Spinal Stenosis
The purpose of this trial is to assess whether the Stabilimax NZ® is at least as safe and
effective as the control therapy of fusion in patients receiving decompression surgery for
the treatment of clinically symptomatic spinal stenosis at one contiguous vertebral levels
from L1-S1. Safety and effectiveness will be assessed by means of primary study endpoints
which address improvements in pain and function in the absence of major device related
complications.
The study hypothesis criteria for demonstrating safety and efficacy requires scientific
evidence that patients classified as satisfying the primary study endpoint post device
implantation is at least as good for Stabilimax NZ® recipients as that for patients
undergoing fusion with posterior pedicle screw instrumentation at the 24 month followup
assessment.
Degenerative spine disease is a normal part of the aging process. This degeneration can
sometimes cause significant pain and limit normal movement.
The pain can be from many sources. For patients being enrolled into this study the pain has
been diagnosed to be primarily as a result of a condition called spinal stenosis. The
current standard of care for the treatment of moderate to severe spinal stenosis is a
surgical procedure that relieves the pressure on the spinal cord and nerves is called
decompression surgery. The surgeon removes the tissue and bone that are causing the
narrowing thus relieving the pinching of the spinal cord and nerve roots. After surgery, the
patient may have a spine that is too unstable. In other words the muscles and ligaments
around the spine have to work too hard to maintain normal posture and to control movement.
For many years those patients with unstable backs have received fusion therapy. Fusion is
the development of bone between the vertebra to stabilize the spine and prevent motion. This
is done by inserting a bone graft around the vertebra being treated and placing a rigid
brace called a fusion device to prevent movement. Eventually bone will form between the
vertebra and the spine will become "fused".
In this study we will be conducting research to evaluate a new, investigative medical device
that is designed to brace and support the spine just like fusion but without fusing in the
patient's spine. Devices that do this are called "motion preserving" or "dynamic
stabilizing" spinal devices. The investigational device that is being evaluated in this
study is called the Stabilimax NZ® Dynamic Spinal Stabilization System. The Stabilimax NZ®
is inserted and fixed to the vertebra by means of pedicle screws in exactly the same way a
fusion device is inserted and attached. The only difference is that for the Stabilimax NZ®
no bone graft will be placed around or between the vertebra to promote bone growth for
fusion. Patients in the study will receive either the Stabilimax NZ® or will receive a
fusion procedure. The study is a randomized controlled clinical trial using a 2:1
investigational:control randomization scheme. The study will enroll 480 patients at
approximately 20 investigational sites across the United States.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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