Superiority of multilevel cervical arthroplasty outcomes versus single-level outcomes: 229 Consecutive PCM prostheses

Luiz Pimenta, Paul C. McAfee, Andy Cappuccino, Bryan W. Cunningham, Roberto Diaz, Etevaldo Coutinho

Producción: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

113 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

STUDY DESIGN/SETTING. Class 2 level of evidence: This is a prospective, consecutive series of 229 prosthetic implantations that were concurrently enrolled between single-level versus multilevel cervical arthroplasty comprising an FDA Pilot Study. OBJECTIVE. This study investigated multilevel cervical disc replacement in relation to single-level cervical arthroplasty to find if the same reduction in clinical success would occur with this alternative treatment. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA. Usually, the clinical outcomes of instrumented cervical fusions deteriorate as the number of vertebral levels of involvement increases. METHODS. A total of 229 patients presented with cervical herniated nucleus pulposus, cervical spondylosis, and/or adjacent segment disease with cervical radiculopathy or myelopathy. Following anterior cervical neurologic decompression seventy-one patients required porous coated motion (PCM) cervical arthroplasties from C3-C4 to C7-T1 (Group S, single level). Sixty-nine patients underwent 158 multilevel PCM cervical arthroplasties (Group M, multilevel) during the same time interval, for the same indications, performed by the same surgeons under the same clinical protocol: double level, 53 cases; three levels, 12 cases: and 4 levels, 4 cases. RESULTS. The self-assessment outcomes instruments showed significantly more improvement for the multilevel cases. The mean improvement in the NDI for the single cases was 37.6% versus the multilevel cases mean improvement in NDI was 52.6% (P = 0.021). The difference between the two was statistically significant. The mean improvement in the VAS showed the same association: single-level mean improvement 58.4% versus the multilevel cases mean VAS improvement was 65.9%. The Odom's were also more improved for the multilevel versus the single-level group: 93.9% versus 90.5% in the excellent, good, and fair categories. The reoperation rates and serious adverse events were similar between the single-level (S = 3) to the multilevel arthroplasty (M = 2) groups. Kaplan-Meier implant survivorship analysis at 3 years for the cohort of 229 prostheses was 94.5% (confidence interval, 1.00-0.820). CONCLUSIONS. This prospective study of cervical arthroplasty is the first report to date showing significantly improved clinical outcomes for multilevel cervical arthroplasty compared with single-level cervical disc replacement using an FDA validated outcome instrument.

Idioma originalInglés
Páginas (desde-hasta)1337-1344
Número de páginas8
PublicaciónSpine
Volumen32
N.º12
DOI
EstadoPublicada - may. 2007
Publicado de forma externa

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