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Surgical Data and Early Postoperative Outcomes after Minimally Invasive Lumbar Interbody Fusion: Results of a Prospective, Multicenter, Observational Data-Monitored Study

Author

Listed:
  • Paulo Pereira
  • David Buzek
  • Jörg Franke
  • Wolfgang Senker
  • Arkadiusz Kosmala
  • Ulrich Hubbe
  • Neil Manson
  • Wout Rosenberg
  • Roberto Assietti
  • Frederic Martens
  • Giovanni Barbanti Brodano
  • Kai-Michael Scheufler

Abstract

Minimally invasive lumbar interbody fusion (MILIF) offers potential for reduced operative morbidity and earlier recovery compared with open procedures for patients with degenerative lumbar disorders (DLD). Firm conclusions about advantages of MILIF over open procedures cannot be made because of limited number of large studies of MILIF in a real-world setting. Clinical effectiveness of MILIF in a large, unselected real-world patient population was assessed in this Prospective, monitored, international, multicenter, observational study. Objective: To observe and document short-term recovery after minimally invasive interbody fusion for DLD. Materials and Methods: In a predefined 4-week analysis from this study, experienced surgeons (≥30 MILIF surgeries pre-study) treated patients with DLD by one- or two-level MILIF. The primary study objective was to document patients’ short-term post-interventional recovery (primary objective) including back/leg pain (visual analog scale [VAS]), disability (Oswestry Disability Index [ODI]), health status (EQ-5D) and Patient satisfaction. Results: At 4 weeks, 249 of 252 patients were remaining in the study; the majority received one-level MILIF (83%) and TLIF was the preferred approach (94.8%). For one-level (and two-level) procedures, surgery duration was 128 (182) min, fluoroscopy time 115 (154) sec, and blood-loss 164 (233) mL. Time to first ambulation was 1.3 days and time to study-defined surgery recovery was 3.2 days. Patients reported significantly (P

Suggested Citation

  • Paulo Pereira & David Buzek & Jörg Franke & Wolfgang Senker & Arkadiusz Kosmala & Ulrich Hubbe & Neil Manson & Wout Rosenberg & Roberto Assietti & Frederic Martens & Giovanni Barbanti Brodano & Kai-Mi, 2015. "Surgical Data and Early Postoperative Outcomes after Minimally Invasive Lumbar Interbody Fusion: Results of a Prospective, Multicenter, Observational Data-Monitored Study," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 10(3), pages 1-15, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0122312
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0122312
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