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Surgically treated cervical myelopathy: a functional outcome comparison study between multilevel anterior cervical decompression fusion with instrumentation and posterior laminoplasty
Authors:Chusheng Seng  Benjamin P.B. Tow  Mashfiqul A. Siddiqui  Abhishek Srivastava  Lushun Wang  Andy K.S. Yew  William Yeo  Shu Hui Rebecca Khoo  Nidu Maran Shanmugam Balakrishnan  Hamid Rahmatullah Bin Abd Razak  John L.T. Chen  Chang M. Guo  Seang B. Tan  Wai-Mun Yue
Affiliation:1. Department of Orthopedic Surgery, University of Yamanashi, 1110, Shimokato, Chuo, Yamanashi, Japan;2. Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Kyonan Medical Center Fujikawa Hospital, Yamanashi, Japan;3. Department of Radiological Sciences, Graduate School of Health Sciences, Tokyo Metropolitan University, Tokyo, Japan;4. Department of Radiology, University of Yamanashi, 1110, Shimokato, Chuo, Yamanashi, Japan;5. Department of Radiology, Toho University Omori Medical Center, Tokyo, Japan
Abstract:Background contextMultilevel cervical myelopathy can be treated with anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) or corpectomy via the anterior approach and laminoplasty via the posterior approach. Till date, there is no proven superior approach.PurposeTo elucidate any potential advantage of one approach over the other with regard to clinical midterm outcomes in this study.Study designA prospective, 2-year follow-up of patients with cervical myelopathy treated with multilevel anterior cervical decompression fusion and plating and posterior laminoplasty.Patient sampleIn total, 116 patients were studied. Sixty-four patients underwent ACDF two levels and above or anterior cervical corpectomy and fusion one level and above. Fifty-two patients underwent posterior cervical surgery (laminoplasty C3–C6 and C3–C7).Outcome measuresSelf-report measures: Japan Orthopedic Association (JOA) score, JOA recovery rate, visual analog scale for neck pain (VASNP), neck disability index (NDI), and American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) neurogenic symptom score (AAOS-NSS). Physiologic measures: range of motion (ROM) flexion and extension of neck. Functional measures: short-form 36 (SF-36) score comprising physical functioning, physical role function, bodily pain, general health, vitality, social role function, emotional role function, and mental health scales.MethodsComparison of the JOA scores, JOA recovery rates, NDI scores, SF-36 scores, VASNP, and ROM preoperatively to 2 years. Chi-square and two-sided Student t tests were used to analyze the variables.ResultsPosterior surgery took an hour shorter (p<.05) and had better improvement in JOA scores at early follow-up of 6 months (p=.025). Anterior surgery group had better improvement of NDI scores at early follow-up of 6 months (p=.024) and was associated with less blood loss intraoperatively compared with posterior surgery. There was no statistical difference between the two groups for JOA scores, JOA recovery rates, SF-36 quality-of-life scores, NDI, AAOS-NSS, VAS neck pain, and ROM at 2 years. Complications were higher for anterior surgery group: two hematoma postoperation, one vocal cord paresis, and one new onset C6/C7 dermatome numbness versus one dura leak in posterior surgery group.ConclusionsOur study showed that patients with multilevel disease treated with laminoplasty do well and compare favorably with patients treated with an anterior approach. Notably, posterior surgery was associated with shorter operating time, better improvement in JOA scores at 6 months, and a tendency toward lesser complications. Posterior surgery was not associated with increased neck disability and neck pain at 2 years. Anterior surgery had better NDI improvement at early follow-up. There is a need for a larger study that is prospectively randomized with long-term follow-up before we can confidently advocate one approach over the other in the management of cervical myelopathy.
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