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RECRUITING
NCT04542720

Decompression Versus Decompression and Fusion

Sponsor: Massachusetts General Hospital

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Adjacent segment disease (ASD) in the lumbar spine is a well-known sequela of lumbar fusion surgery. The annual incidence of adjacent level re-operation is approximately 3% with a ten-year prevalence of 20-30%. Frequently, the surgical treatment involves decompression of the adjacent level coupled with extension of the instrumentation and fusion. Advocates of this paradigm cite the altered kinematics and biomechanics of levels adjacent to a lumbar fusion mass. Furthermore, decompressed levels adjacent to a fused segments are associated with higher rates of ASD in retrospective studies. Yet, a retrospective review of higher quality data concluded decompression adjacent to single-level fusion provides similar outcomes compared to fusions extending across the decompressed segments. Given the conflicting data currently available, higher quality data are needed to guide surgical decision-making in ASD. The purpose of this trial is to prospectively compare decompression and decompression with fusion in patients with lumbar ASD.

Official title: Decompression Versus Decompression and Fusion for Lumbar Adjacent Segment Disease

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

96

Start Date

2020-09-01

Completion Date

2027-09

Last Updated

2025-11-21

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

PROCEDURE

Observational: Decompression

Patients will undergo decompression alone of the supradjacent level. The surgical technique will be surgeon dependent. All surgeons will be encouraged to avoid damaging facet joints above the fusion mass, retaining 50% of the pars of the decompressed level and performing as minimal of a medial facetectomy as necessary.

PROCEDURE

Observational: Extension Fusion

Patients will undergo decompression and extension of posterior instrumentation and fusion. This may or may not include exchange of pre-existing instrumentation. The use of interbody cages will be left to the discretion of the treating surgeon. The purpose of introducing this heterogeneity is to increase the generalizability of the trial results. The fusion cohort will not utilize bone morphogenetic protein products.

Locations (1)

Massachusetts General Hospital

Boston, Massachusetts, United States