Paulus Megan Carroll, Kalantar Seyed Babak, Radcliff Kris
*Department of Orthopaedics, Medstar Georgetown University Hospital, Washington, DC; and †Rothman Institute, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA.
Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2014 Mar 1;39(5):388-93. doi: 10.1097/BRS.0000000000000150.
Literature review.
To assess (1) quality of life in patients with adult scoliosis who underwent nonoperative and/or surgical treatment, and (2) cost-effectiveness of different scoliosis treatment modalities.
Recently, there has been an interest in examining quality of life of patients undergoing treatment for adult scoliosis, comparing the value of nonoperative versus operative management. This article reviews the current literature on treatment of adult scoliosis, in the hopes of drawing conclusions for the best approach to these patients.
MEDLINE and PubMed databases were searched to identify articles. Health-related quality of life measures included Oswestry Disability Index scores, Scoliosis Research Society (SRS) instrument scores, 12-Item Short Form Health Survey, and numerical rating scale for leg and/or back pain. Studies included were those involving patients with adult scoliosis who underwent primary surgery or nonoperative management. The studies that focused on the change in validated outcome scores from the onset of the study to final follow-up were found to be valuable. Studies on predominantly adolescent scoliosis and those that only measured postoperative outcomes scores were excluded.
The SRS-22, Oswestry Disability Index, 12-Item Short Form Health Survey, and numerical rating scale were found to be validated for measuring quality of life in patients with scoliosis. Thirteen studies were included, which evaluated changes in health-related quality of life outcomes from baseline in surgical and nonsurgical treatment of adult scoliosis. There was a trend toward improved quality of life measures in patients undergoing surgical treatment for adult scoliosis.
Adults with painful and disabling scoliosis may benefit from surgical treatment compared with nonsurgical treatment, given the proper indications. Nonsurgical treatment does not seem to be cost-effective and has not shown to have a positive impact on quality of life, although there is a possibility that patients' health may have deteriorated if they did not receive the nonsurgical treatment. Future prospective studies focusing on the cost-effectiveness of adult scoliosis treatment and improvement of quality of life are needed to confirm the assertion of the current retrospective literature that surgery provides better quality of life than nonoperative treatment.
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文献综述。
评估(1)接受非手术和/或手术治疗的成年脊柱侧弯患者的生活质量,以及(2)不同脊柱侧弯治疗方式的成本效益。
最近,人们对研究成年脊柱侧弯患者治疗后的生活质量、比较非手术与手术治疗的价值产生了兴趣。本文回顾了当前关于成年脊柱侧弯治疗的文献,以期得出针对这些患者的最佳治疗方法的结论。
检索MEDLINE和PubMed数据库以识别文章。与健康相关的生活质量测量指标包括Oswestry功能障碍指数评分、脊柱侧弯研究学会(SRS)工具评分、12项简明健康调查问卷以及腿部和/或背部疼痛数字评分量表。纳入的研究为涉及接受初次手术或非手术治疗的成年脊柱侧弯患者的研究。发现那些关注从研究开始到最终随访时经过验证的结局评分变化的研究很有价值。主要针对青少年脊柱侧弯的研究以及仅测量术后结局评分的研究被排除。
发现SRS - 22、Oswestry功能障碍指数、12项简明健康调查问卷和数字评分量表可用于测量脊柱侧弯患者的生活质量。纳入了13项研究,这些研究评估了成年脊柱侧弯手术和非手术治疗中与健康相关的生活质量结局从基线起的变化。接受成年脊柱侧弯手术治疗的患者在生活质量测量方面有改善的趋势。
对于有疼痛且致残的成年脊柱侧弯患者,在有适当指征的情况下,与非手术治疗相比,手术治疗可能有益。非手术治疗似乎不具有成本效益,且未显示对生活质量有积极影响,尽管如果患者未接受非手术治疗,其健康状况有可能已经恶化。未来需要开展侧重于成年脊柱侧弯治疗成本效益和生活质量改善的前瞻性研究,以证实当前回顾性文献中关于手术治疗比非手术治疗能提供更好生活质量这一论断。
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