Buchbinder Rachelle, Johnston Renea V, Rischin Kobi J, Homik Joanne, Jones C Allyson, Golmohammadi Kamran, Kallmes David F
Monash Department of Clinical Epidemiology, Cabrini Institute, Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, 4 Drysdale Street, Malvern, Victoria, Australia, 3144.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2018 Nov 6;11(11):CD006349. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD006349.pub4.
Percutaneous vertebroplasty remains widely used to treat osteoporotic vertebral fractures although our 2015 Cochrane review did not support its role in routine practice.
To update the available evidence of the benefits and harms of vertebroplasty for treatment of osteoporotic vertebral fractures.
We updated the search of CENTRAL, MEDLINE and Embase and trial registries to 15 November 2017.
We included randomised and quasi-randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of adults with painful osteoporotic vertebral fractures, comparing vertebroplasty with placebo (sham), usual care, or another intervention. As it is least prone to bias, vertebroplasty compared with placebo was the primary comparison. Major outcomes were mean overall pain, disability, disease-specific and overall health-related quality of life, patient-reported treatment success, new symptomatic vertebral fractures and number of other serious adverse events.
We used standard methodologic procedures expected by Cochrane.
Twenty-one trials were included: five compared vertebroplasty with placebo (541 randomised participants), eight with usual care (1136 randomised participants), seven with kyphoplasty (968 randomised participants) and one compared vertebroplasty with facet joint glucocorticoid injection (217 randomised participants). Trial size varied from 46 to 404 participants, most participants were female, mean age ranged between 62.6 and 81 years, and mean symptom duration varied from a week to more than six months.Four placebo-controlled trials were at low risk of bias and one was possibly susceptible to performance and detection bias. Other trials were at risk of bias for several criteria, most notably due to lack of participant and personnel blinding.Compared with placebo, high- to moderate-quality evidence from five trials indicates that vertebroplasty provides no clinically important benefits with respect to pain, disability, disease-specific or overall quality of life or treatment success at one month. Evidence for quality of life and treatment success was downgraded due to possible imprecision. Evidence was not downgraded for potential publication bias as only one placebo-controlled trial remains unreported. Mean pain (on a scale zero to 10, higher scores indicate more pain) was five points with placebo and 0.7 points better (0.3 better to 1.2 better) with vertebroplasty, an absolute pain reduction of 7% (3% better to 12% better, minimal clinical important difference is 15%) and relative reduction of 10% (4% better to 17% better) (five trials, 535 participants). Mean disability measured by the Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire (scale range zero to 23, higher scores indicate worse disability) was 14.2 points in the placebo group and 1.5 points better (0.4 better to 2.6 better) in the vertebroplasty group, absolute improvement 7% (2% to 11% better), relative improvement 9% better (2% to 15% better) (four trials, 472 participants).Disease-specific quality of life measured by the Quality of Life Questionnaire of the European Foundation for Osteoporosis (QUALEFFO) (scale zero to 100, higher scores indicating worse quality of life) was 62 points in the placebo group and 2.3 points better (1.4 points worse to 6.7 points better), an absolute imrovement of 2% (1% worse to 6% better); relative improvement 4% better (2% worse to 10% better) (three trials, 351 participants). Overall quality of life (European Quality of Life (EQ5D), zero = death to 1 = perfect health, higher scores indicate greater quality of life) was 0.38 points in the placebo group and 0.05 points better (0.01 better to 0.09 better) in the vertebroplasty group, absolute improvement: 5% (1% to 9% better), relative improvement: 18% (4% to 32% better) (three trials, 285 participants). In one trial (78 participants), 9/40 (or 225 per 1000) people perceived that treatment was successful in the placebo group compared with 12/38 (or 315 per 1000; 95% CI 150 to 664) in the vertebroplasty group, RR 1.40 (95% CI 0.67 to 2.95), absolute difference: 9% more reported success (11% fewer to 29% more); relative change: 40% more reported success (33% fewer to 195% more).Low-quality evidence (downgraded due to imprecision and potential for bias from the usual-care controlled trials) indicates uncertainty around the risk estimates of harms with vertebroplasty. The incidence of new symptomatic vertebral fractures (from six trials) was 48/418 (95 per 1000; range 34 to 264)) in the vertebroplasty group compared with 31/422 (73 per 1000) in the control group; RR 1.29 (95% CI 0.46 to 3.62)). The incidence of other serious adverse events (five trials) was 16/408 (34 per 1000, range 18 to 62) in the vertebroplasty group compared with 23/413 (56 per 1000) in the control group; RR 0.61 (95% CI 0.33 to 1.10). Notably, serious adverse events reported with vertebroplasty included osteomyelitis, cord compression, thecal sac injury and respiratory failure.Our subgroup analyses indicate that the effects did not differ according to duration of pain (acute versus subacute). Including data from the eight trials that compared vertebroplasty with usual care in a sensitivity analyses altered the primary results, with all combined analyses displaying considerable heterogeneity.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: We found high- to moderate-quality evidence that vertebroplasty has no important benefit in terms of pain, disability, quality of life or treatment success in the treatment of acute or subacute osteoporotic vertebral fractures in routine practice when compared with a sham procedure. Results were consistent across the studies irrespective of the average duration of pain.Sensitivity analyses confirmed that open trials comparing vertebroplasty with usual care are likely to have overestimated any benefit of vertebroplasty. Correcting for these biases would likely drive any benefits observed with vertebroplasty towards the null, in keeping with findings from the placebo-controlled trials.Numerous serious adverse events have been observed following vertebroplasty. However due to the small number of events, we cannot be certain about whether or not vertebroplasty results in a clinically important increased risk of new symptomatic vertebral fractures and/or other serious adverse events. Patients should be informed about both the high- to moderate-quality evidence that shows no important benefit of vertebroplasty and its potential for harm.
经皮椎体成形术仍被广泛用于治疗骨质疏松性椎体骨折,尽管我们2015年的Cochrane综述并不支持其在常规治疗中的作用。
更新椎体成形术治疗骨质疏松性椎体骨折的益处和危害的现有证据。
我们将CENTRAL、MEDLINE、Embase及试验注册库的检索更新至2017年11月15日。
我们纳入了患有疼痛性骨质疏松性椎体骨折的成年人的随机和半随机对照试验(RCT),比较椎体成形术与安慰剂(假手术)、常规治疗或其他干预措施。由于最不易产生偏倚,因此椎体成形术与安慰剂的比较是主要对照。主要结局包括平均总体疼痛、残疾、疾病特异性和总体健康相关生活质量、患者报告的治疗成功率、新的有症状椎体骨折以及其他严重不良事件的数量。
我们采用了Cochrane期望的标准方法程序。
纳入了21项试验:5项比较椎体成形术与安慰剂(541名随机参与者),8项比较椎体成形术与常规治疗(1136名随机参与者),7项比较椎体成形术与后凸成形术(968名随机参与者),1项比较椎体成形术与小关节糖皮质激素注射(217名随机参与者)。试验规模从46名至404名参与者不等,大多数参与者为女性,平均年龄在62.6岁至81岁之间,平均症状持续时间从1周至6个月以上不等。4项安慰剂对照试验的偏倚风险较低,1项试验可能存在实施和检测偏倚。其他试验在多个标准方面存在偏倚风险,最显著的是由于缺乏参与者和人员的盲法。与安慰剂相比,5项试验的高质量至中等质量证据表明,椎体成形术在1个月时在疼痛、残疾、疾病特异性或总体生活质量或治疗成功率方面没有临床重要益处。生活质量和治疗成功率的证据因可能的不精确性而降级。由于仅有1项安慰剂对照试验未报告,因此证据未因潜在的发表偏倚而降级。平均疼痛(0至10分制,分数越高疼痛越严重)在安慰剂组为5分,椎体成形术组改善0.7分(改善0.3分至1.2分),绝对疼痛减轻7%(改善3%至12%,最小临床重要差异为15%),相对减轻10%(改善4%至17%)(5项试验,535名参与者)。用罗兰-莫里斯残疾问卷测量的平均残疾(范围0至23分,分数越高残疾越严重)在安慰剂组为14.2分,椎体成形术组改善1.5分(改善0.4分至2.6分);绝对改善7%(改善2%至11%),相对改善9%(改善2%至15%)(4项试验,472名参与者)。用欧洲骨质疏松症基金会生活质量问卷(QUALEFFO)测量的疾病特异性生活质量(范围0至100分,分数越高生活质量越差)在安慰剂组为62分,椎体成形术组改善2.3分(恶化1.4分至改善6.7分),绝对改善2%(恶化1%至改善6%);相对改善4%(恶化至改善10%)(3项试验,351名参与者)。总体生活质量(欧洲生活质量量表(EQ5D),0=死亡至1=完美健康,分数越高生活质量越高)在安慰剂组为0.38分,椎体成形术组改善0.05分(改善0.01分至0.09分);绝对改善5%(改善1%至9%),相对改善18%(改善4%至32%)(3项试验,285名参与者)。在1项试验(78名参与者)中,安慰剂组40人中9人(或每1000人中有225人)认为治疗成功,椎体成形术组38人中12人(或每1000人中有315人;95%CI 150至664)认为治疗成功,RR 1.40(95%CI 0.67至2.95),绝对差异:报告成功的人数多9%(少11%至多29%);相对变化:报告成功的人数多40%(少33%至多195%)。低质量证据(因不精确性和常规治疗对照试验的偏倚可能性而降级)表明椎体成形术危害风险估计存在不确定性。椎体成形术组新的有症状椎体骨折发生率(来自6项试验)为48/418(每1000人中有95人;范围34至264),对照组为31/422(每1000人中有73人);RR 1.29(95%CI 0.46至3.62)。其他严重不良事件发生率(来自5项试验)椎体成形术组为16/408(每1000人中有34人,范围18至62),对照组为23/413(每(1000人中有56人);RR 0.61(95%CI 0.33至1.10)。值得注意的是,椎体成形术报告的严重不良事件包括骨髓炎、脊髓压迫、硬膜囊损伤和呼吸衰竭。我们的亚组分析表明,疗效在疼痛持续时间(急性与亚急性)方面无差异。在敏感性分析中纳入8项比较椎体成形术与常规治疗的试验数据改变了主要结果,所有合并分析均显示出相当大的异质性。
我们发现高质量至中等质量的证据表明,在常规治疗中,与假手术相比,椎体成形术在治疗急性或亚急性骨质疏松性椎体骨折时,在疼痛、残疾、生活质量或治疗成功率方面没有重要益处。无论疼痛的平均持续时间如何,各研究结果均一致。敏感性分析证实,比较椎体成形术与常规治疗的开放试验可能高估了椎体成形术的任何益处。校正这些偏倚可能会使观察到的椎体成形术的任何益处趋于无效,这与安慰剂对照试验的结果一致。椎体成形术后观察到了许多严重不良事件。然而,由于事件数量较少,我们无法确定椎体成形术是否会导致新的有症状椎体骨折和/或其他严重不良事件的临床重要风险增加。应告知患者高质量至中等质量的证据表明椎体成形术没有重要益处及其潜在危害。