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Spine Patient Outcomes Research Trial (SPORT): Spinal Stenosis

Dartmouth Health logo

Dartmouth Health

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

Spinal Stenosis
Low Back Pain

Treatments

Other: Non-surgical treatments
Procedure: Decompressive laminectomy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency
NIH

Identifiers

NCT00000411
U01 AR45444 NIAMS-004B
U01AR045444 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study tests the effectiveness of different treatments for the three most commonly diagnosed conditions of the lower backbone (lumbar spine). The purpose is to learn which of two commonly prescribed treatments (surgery and nonsurgical therapy) works better for specific types of low back pain. Low back pain is one of the most widely experienced health problems in the United States and the world. It is the second most frequent condition, after the common cold, for which people see a doctor or lose days from work.

In this part of the study, we will treat patients with spinal stenosis (a narrowing of spaces in the backbone that results in pressure on the spinal cord and/or nerve roots) with a type of surgery known as posterior decompressive laminectomy or with nonsurgical methods. This study does not cover the cost of treatment.

Full description

Low back pain is considered one of the most widely experienced health problems in the U.S. and the world. It is the second most frequent condition, after the common cold, for which patients see a physician or lose days from work. Estimated costs to those who are severely disabled from low back pain range from $30-70 billion annually. Rates of spinal surgery in the U.S. have increased sharply over time, and researchers have documented 15-fold geographic variation in rates of these surgeries. In many cases, where one lives and who one sees for the condition appear to determine the rates of surgery. Despite these trends, there is little evidence proving the effectiveness of these therapies over non-surgical management.

This study will use the National Spine Network to conduct a multicenter, randomized, controlled trial for the three most common diagnostic groups for which spine surgery is performed: lumbar intervertebral disc herniation (IDH), spinal stenosis (SpS), and spinal stenosis secondary to degenerative spondylolisthesis (DS). This arm of the trial will deal with patients from the second diagnostic group. The study will compare the most commonly used standard surgical treatments to the most commonly used standard nonsurgical treatments. We will conduct the study at 12 sites throughout the United States.

The primary endpoint of the study will be changes in health-related quality of life as measured by the SF-36 health status questionnaire. Secondary endpoints will include patient satisfaction with treatment, utility for current health in order to estimate quality-adjusted life years (QALYS) as the measure for cost-effectiveness, resource use, and cost.

We will follow patients at 6 weeks and 3, 6, 12, and 24 months to determine their health status, function, satisfaction, and health care use. We anticipate that we will enroll and randomly allocate a total of 370 study participants in this arm of the trial. We will track an additional observational cohort to assess health and resource outcomes. Enrollment in the Observational cohort has been completed as of February 2003.

We will integrate data from the trial and observational cohorts to formally estimate the cost-effectiveness of surgical versus nonsurgical interventions for IDH, SpS, and DS. The results of this trial will provide, for the first time, scientific evidence as to the relative effectiveness of surgical versus nonsurgical treatment for these three most commonly diagnosed lumbar spine conditions.

Enrollment

289 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Duration of Symptoms: 12 or more weeks.
  • Treatments tried: Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory medical therapy and physical therapy.
  • Surgical Screening: Pain in low back, buttocks, or lower extremity that becomes worse with lumbar extension. Must be confirmed by evidence of central or central-lateral compression of the cauda equina by a degenerative lesion of the facet joint, disc, or ligamentum flavum on MRI, computed tomography scans, or myelograms.
  • Tests: MRI to confirm diagnosis and level(s).

Exclusion criteria

  • Previous lumbar spine surgery.
  • Not a surgical candidate for any of these reasons: Overall health that makes spinal surgery too life-threatening to be an appropriate alternative, patient has improved dramatically with conservative care, or the patient is unable (for any reason) to undergo surgery within 6 months.
  • Possible pregnancy.
  • Active malignancy: Patients with a history of any invasive malignancy (except nonmelanoma skin cancer) are ineligible unless they have been treated with curative intent AND have not had any clinical signs or symptoms of the malignancy for at least 5 years.
  • Current fracture, infection, and/or deformity (greater than 15 degrees of lumbar scoliosis, using Cobb measure technique) of the spine.
  • Age less than 18 years.
  • Cauda equina syndrome or progressive neurologic deficit (usually requiring urgent surgery).
  • Unavailability for followup (planning to move, no telephone, etc.) or inability to complete data surveys.
  • Symptoms less than 12 weeks.
  • Patient currently enrolled in any experimental "spine related" study.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

289 participants in 2 patient groups

Surgery
Active Comparator group
Description:
Decompressive laminectomy
Treatment:
Other: Non-surgical treatments
Procedure: Decompressive laminectomy
Non-surgical treatments
Active Comparator group
Description:
Active physical therapy modality, Education/Counseling with home exercise instruction, and an NSAID if tolerated
Treatment:
Other: Non-surgical treatments

Trial contacts and locations

13

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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