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Learn about the best surgical treatment option for degenerative spondylolisthesis, including open fusion with hardware. This procedure provides thorough decompression, stable fusion, and potential improvement of lower back pain. Explore different fixation options and their benefits.
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Degenerative Spondylolisthesis:The Best Fixation is an Open Fusion with Hardware Options Colin B. Harris, MDAssistant Professor Department of Orthopaedics Rutgers – New Jersey Medical School Newark, NJ
Disclosures • Globus, Inc. – Consulting, teaching
Degenerative Spondylolisthesis • Common in older population
Degenerative Spondylolisthesis • Common in older population • “Source” of LBP
Degenerative Spondylolisthesis • Common in older population • “Source” of LBP • +/- Radiculopathy • +/- Neurogenic claudication
Degenerative Spondylolisthesis • Common in older population • “Source” of LBP • +/- Radiculopathy • +/- Neurogenic claudication • Usually L4-L5 > L3-L4 Conservative treatment 3-6 mo
Laminectomy + posterior fusion ALIF Laminectomy TLIF
To simplify: GOALS OF SURGERY • Thorough decompression to address leg pain and neurogenic claudication • Stable fusion to prevent slip progression • +/- improve lower back pain
To simplify: GOALS OF SURGERY • Thorough decompression to address leg pain and neurogenic claudication • Stable fusion to prevent slip progression • +/- improve lower back pain Minimize cost and risk of complications
Why operate? • “Think Nerve”
Why operate? • “Successful surgical management of isolated lower back pain for degenerative conditions is a gamble at best”
Laminectomy without fusion • Reasonable for elderly / low functioning, “stable” slip • Not for young & active • Risk recurrent back/leg pain • Inferior outcomes vs laminectomy and fusion Herkowitz and Kurz 1991 Herkowitz H, Kurz L. JBJS Am 1991;73(6):802-8.
MIS TLIF? • Learning curve • Posterolateral fusion lacking • Long-term outcomes no better than open • Maybe: higher neurologic injury / CSF leak
ALIF / OLIF ? • High fusion rate • Large graft • Great operation
ALIF / OLIF ? • However… • Vascular injury 1-5% • Retrograde ejaculation • Revision difficult • Not easy at L4-L5
Open posterior decompression and fusion • Withstood test of time • Significant benefits • Allows thorough decompression • Full exposure to posterolateral fusion bed • Good long term outcomes • Avoid morbidity of anterior / lateral approaches
76 patients non-instrumented vs instrumented single level lami and fusion for DS • 2 year follow up • Instrumented group 82% fused (vs 45%) • No significant difference in clinical outcomes
Prospective, randomized study n=47 • Decompression + fusion with iliac crest autograft (no instrumentation) • Avg. F/U = 7 years, 8 months • Excellent to good clinical outcome • 86% with solid fusion vs. 56% pseudoarthrosis • Conclusion: Patients with solid fusion do better
What do we know? Patients with solid fusion do better
What do we know? Patients with solid fusion do better Instrumentation improves fusion rates
What do we know? Patients with solid fusion do better Instrumentation improves fusion rates Addition of instrumentation BENEFICIAL despite difficulty proving better outcomes in high quality studies
What are our options • Traditional pedicle screws • Interspinous devices • Cortical screw technique
Open pedicle screw technique • Gold standard • Safe • Familiar to most surgeons • Cons • Need for larger soft tissue dissection • Risk of nerve injury / screw malposition • Add operative time and blood loss
Open pedicle screw technique • Gold standard • Safe • Familiar to most surgeons • Cons • Need for larger soft tissue dissection • Risk of nerve injury / screw malposition • Suboptimal in osteopenic bone
Pearls • Scrutinize axial cuts MRI/CT preop • Resect inferolateral corner suprajacent facet • Undertap by 1-2mm • Avoid burying screw head in facet
Cortical Screw Technique • More medial starting point • 30% greater pullout strength • Less soft tissue dissection • Ideal levels L3 – L4 – L5 (not for S1) Tortolani, Stroh JAAOS 24(11):755-61, 2016
Cortical Screw Technique • Cons • Learning curve • Difficult to redirect after initial trajectory • Difficult to perform posterolateral grafting
Interspinous Devices • “Inter Spinous Fusion” • Coflex-F • Minuteman • Minimally invasive • Require preservation of spinous processes • Data limited to small case series
Conclusions • Open decompression and fusion remains gold standard • Role of newer techniques continues to evolve • Key points • Thorough decompression • Meticulous graft bed preparation • Choose best fixation technique in your hands