King Joseph T, Moossy John J, Tsevat Joel, Roberts Mark S
Section of Neurosurgery, Veterans Administration Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven Connecticut 06516, USA.
J Neurosurg Spine. 2005 May;2(5):526-34. doi: 10.3171/spi.2005.2.5.0526.
Investigators reporting decompressive surgery to treat patients with cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM) have described inconsistent benefits. In the present study the authors used three types of outcomes instruments to assess the results of CSM surgery.
The authors collected prospective baseline and 6-month follow-up data in a cohort of 62 patients with CSM. Data collection included those pertaining to demographics; symptoms; physical findings; myelopathy severity; health status measured with the Short Form-36; and health values according to the standard gamble, time trade-off, visual analog scale, and willingness to pay. Rank-order methods were used to compare surgical and nonsurgical patients, and multivariate regression techniques adjusting for baseline characteristics were performed to examine the effects of surgery. During the study period, 28 patients underwent surgery, 34 did not, and there were no baseline differences between the two groups in demographics, symptoms, myelopathy scores, health status, or health values (p > or = 0.120 in all domains); there was a greater prevalence of hand intrinsic muscle atrophy (p = 0.035) and Hoffmann sign (p = 0.006) in the surgery-treated group. Neither raw comparisons nor regression analyses showed a consistent surgery-related benefit. There were sporadic associations between worse outcomes and older patients, higher income, Babinski sign, longer duration of CSM symptoms, hand clumsiness, lower-extremity numbness, and multilevel surgery (p < or = 0.049 for all).
Analysis of results obtained in the 62 patients with CSM failed to show a surgery-related benefit despite the use of three classes of outcomes instruments. Patient demographics, symptoms, physical signs, and the surgical approach may explain some of the variation in outcomes in patients with CSM.
报告减压手术治疗脊髓型颈椎病(CSM)患者的研究人员描述了不一致的疗效。在本研究中,作者使用了三种类型的结局指标来评估CSM手术的结果。
作者收集了62例CSM患者队列的前瞻性基线和6个月随访数据。数据收集包括人口统计学;症状;体格检查结果;脊髓病严重程度;用简短健康调查问卷-36测量的健康状况;以及根据标准博弈法、时间权衡法、视觉模拟量表和支付意愿得出的健康价值。采用排序法比较手术组和非手术组患者,并进行调整基线特征的多变量回归分析以检验手术效果。在研究期间,28例患者接受了手术,34例未接受手术,两组在人口统计学、症状、脊髓病评分、健康状况或健康价值方面的基线无差异(所有领域p≥0.120);手术治疗组手部固有肌萎缩(p = 0.035)和霍夫曼征(p = 0.006)的患病率更高。原始比较和回归分析均未显示出与手术相关的一致益处。较差的结局与老年患者、高收入、巴宾斯基征、CSM症状持续时间较长、手部笨拙、下肢麻木和多节段手术之间存在零星关联(所有p≤0.049)。
尽管使用了三类结局指标,但对62例CSM患者的结果分析未能显示出与手术相关的益处。患者的人口统计学、症状、体征和手术方式可能解释了CSM患者结局的一些差异。