Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Washington Medical Center, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2012 Oct 15;37(22 Suppl):S18-30. doi: 10.1097/BRS.0b013e31826cac62.
Systematic review.
To determine the population risk of radiographical degeneration in the lumbar and cervical spine as well as the risk of adjacent segment pathology (ASP) among patients who receive and do not receive (but were eligible for) fusion for lumbar or cervical degeneration.
The etiology of ASP remains unclear. It has been suggested that ASP results because of a biomechanical stress transfer from the fusion. It has also been suggested that ASP is a continuation of natural arthritic disease. We sought to examine the literature and compare the rates of spinal degeneration without fusion and the rates of adjacent segment degeneration. Similarities or differences may yield insight into the etiology of ASP.
A systematic review of the English language literature was undertaken for articles published between 1990 and March 15, 2012. Electronic databases and reference lists of key articles were searched to identify articles reporting prevalence and/or incidence of radiographical spinal degeneration (de novo degeneration) or radiographical adjacent segment pathology (RASP) (degeneration after fusion). Two independent reviewers assessed the level of evidence and the overall quality of the literature using the Grades of Recommendation Assessment, Development and Evaluation criteria. Disagreements were resolved by consensus.
We identified 15 studies from our search strategy that met the inclusion criteria from a total of 235 possible studies. Various definitions of radiographical spinal degeneration were used across the studies. For the population risk of radiographical lumbar and cervical spine degeneration, the cumulative incidence ranged from 12.7% to 51.5% during a 5- to 25-year period across 3 studies. One study of the cervical spine reported that there was a baseline prevalence of disc degeneration of 21.7% and, in their follow-up study, reported that 47.9% of individuals had evidence of progression of degeneration during a mean 5.8-year follow-up. The rate of progression per 100 person-years showed an age- and sex-specific trend, with females progressing at a faster rate than males through the 50s, males progressing faster than females during the 60s and 70s, with rates becoming identical in the 80s. Regarding age-specific risk, the prevalence of lumbar degeneration increased with age across 2 studies. For RASP following fusion, the cumulative incidence ranged from 6.3% to 44.4% during 6 to 12.6 years of follow-up across the 7 studies; the risk of cervical RASP was higher than that of lumbar despite the shorter mean follow-up periods.
RASP may occur at a higher rate than natural history and suggests that another factor (such as biomechanical effect of fusion) may accelerate pathologic changes.
ASP may occur at a higher rate than natural spinal degeneration and suggests that another factor (such as biomechanical effect of fusion) may accelerate pathologic changes. Strength of Statement: Weak.
系统评价。
确定接受和未接受(但符合条件)腰椎或颈椎退变融合的患者中,腰椎和颈椎脊柱影像学退变以及邻近节段病变(ASP)的人群风险。
ASP 的病因仍不清楚。有人认为,ASP 是由于融合导致的生物力学应力转移所致。也有人认为,ASP 是自然关节炎疾病的延续。我们试图查阅文献并比较无融合和邻近节段退变的脊柱退变率。相似或不同之处可能有助于了解 ASP 的病因。
对 1990 年至 2012 年 3 月 15 日期间发表的英文文献进行系统评价。检索电子数据库和关键文章的参考文献列表,以确定报告影像学脊柱退变(新发退变)或影像学邻近节段病变(融合后退变)发生率和/或患病率的文章。两名独立的审查员使用推荐评估、制定和评估标准(Grades of Recommendation Assessment, Development and Evaluation)评估证据水平和文献的总体质量。通过共识解决分歧。
我们从搜索策略中确定了 15 项符合纳入标准的研究,共涉及 235 项可能的研究。在研究中使用了不同的影像学脊柱退变定义。在 3 项研究中,5 至 25 年期间,腰椎和颈椎影像学退变的累积发病率范围为 12.7%至 51.5%。一项颈椎研究报告称,椎间盘退变的基线患病率为 21.7%,在后续研究中报告称,在平均 5.8 年的随访中,47.9%的患者有退变进展的证据。每 100 人年的进展率呈现出年龄和性别特异性趋势,女性在 50 多岁时的进展速度快于男性,60 多岁和 70 多岁时男性的进展速度快于女性,80 多岁时进展速度相同。关于年龄特异性风险,两项研究表明,腰椎退变的患病率随年龄增长而增加。在接受融合的患者中,7 项研究在 6 至 12.6 年的随访期间,RASP 的累积发病率范围为 6.3%至 44.4%;尽管平均随访时间较短,但颈椎 RASP 的风险高于腰椎。
RASP 的发生率可能高于自然病史,这表明另一个因素(如融合的生物力学效应)可能加速病理变化。
ASP 的发生率可能高于自然脊柱退变,这表明另一个因素(如融合的生物力学效应)可能加速病理变化。声明强度:弱。