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Scientific Article   |    
Failure of External Spinal Skeletal Fixation to Improve Predictability of Lumbar Arthrodesis
Drew A. Bednar, MD
The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery.  2001; 83:1656-1659 
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Abstract

Background: Whether lumbar arthrodesis can relieve isolated low-back pain in the absence of focal neurological findings or instability is unclear. The results of published studies are also inconsistent with regard to whether temporary back-pain relief with external spinal skeletal fixation can predict lasting back-pain relief after arthrodesis. This report presents the results, with regard to clinical benefit and complications, of more than 100 external spinal skeletal fixation procedures undertaken as a prelude to lumbar arthrodesis.

Methods: The records of all patients who underwent external spinal skeletal fixation between 1989 and 1999 were reviewed with attention to perioperative complications, pain relief from the test procedure, the clinical benefit from a subsequent arthrodesis, and the functional status after the arthrodesis. Analyzed data included the frequency of neurological complications and infections and the benefit (Prolo score) after staged spinal arthrodesis in patients who underwent arthrodesis after temporarily experiencing pain relief with the test procedure.

Results: A total of 103 external spinal skeletal fixation procedures were undertaken. Neurological complications occurred in two procedures (2%); one resulted in permanent sciatica. Infections occurred in five patients (5%). Sixty patients experienced pain relief during the external fixation test, but only twenty-seven of forty-nine patients who went on to have an arthrodesis and had sufficient follow-up reported that they were doing well at a minimum of one year later. In no case did the external spinal skeletal fixation procedure cause a permanent increase in low-back pain.

Conclusions: On the basis of this analysis, external spinal skeletal fixation should not be used as a predictor of pain relief after lumbar arthrodesis.

Figures in this Article
    Back pain, particularly in the absence of radicular signs or symptoms, remains an enigma to orthopaedic surgeons. Spinal fusion is frequently undertaken to relieve it, but review articles suggest that pain relief is achieved after only approximately 70% of these arthrodeses1-3. The problem seems to be more one of "whom to fuse" rather than "how to fuse" because many surgical techniques consistently achieve a solid fusion but pain relief may not follow.
    As early as 1977 external spinal skeletal fixation was performed as an alternative for fracture care4, and in 1986 it was first reported to be effective in relieving back pain through temporary immobilization of the spine5. However, studies examining the ability of this technique to predict the clinical success of spinal fusion5-10 have included only 482 cases, to our knowledge, and the findings have been alarmingly inconsistent.Some authors have reported that temporary pain relief with external spinal skeletal fixation is a good predictor of pain relief after spinal arthrodesis, whereas others have not5,7. The reported frequency of neurological complications (0% to 9%) and infectious complications (10% to 36%) varies greatly as well.
    Mechanical studies have suggested that external spinal skeletal fixation constructs provide substantial support to the spine and that this is a basis for relief of mechanical symptoms11-15.
    The purpose of the current study was to report the results of external spinal skeletal fixation used to predict pain relief at a minimum of one year after subsequent spinal arthrodesis.
     
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    +Fig. 1:Photograph of a patient with a quadrilateral external spinal skeletal fixation frame in place.
    This study was approved by the hospital’s Institutional Review Board and began as a prospective, randomized clinical trial, the first thirty-five cases of which have been previously reported12. On the basis of the positive results of that trial, external spinal skeletal fixation was adopted into clinical practice as a regular but not routine procedure in my regional spine practice. It was used for patients with back pain without sciatica or thecal sac compression as assessed with neuroimaging studies (computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, or myelography); when the results of alternative diagnostic tests (discography and facet blocks) were equivocal; when clinical factors such as disability support, narcotic dependency, somatic amplification, or litigant status suggested a poor prognosis; and/or when the patient demonstrated severe anxiety at the possibility of spinal arthrodesis.
    My concerns regarding the seemingly poor clinical results of arthrodeses following the 100 external spinal skeletal fixation procedures that I had performed prompted this data review. I had ceased my practice of using external spinal skeletal fixation as a diagnostic predictor of the success of arthrodesis.
    The records of 103 patients who underwent external spinal skeletal fixation were reviewed with attention to perioperative complications, pain relief from the test procedure, the clinical benefit from a subsequent arthrodesis, and the functional status after the arthrodesis. Analyzed data included the frequency of neurological complications and infections and the benefit (Prolo score) after staged spinal arthrodesis in patients who underwent arthrodesis after temporarily experiencing pain relief with the test procedure.
    The patients included fifty-eight men with a mean age of forty-four years (range, twenty-seven to sixty-eight years) and forty-five women with a mean age of forty-six years (range, twenty-five to seventy-three years) at the time of spinal fixation. Seventy-four of the 103 patients were receiving income-replacement benefits from disability insurance (forty-six were clients of the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board of Ontario, and the other twenty-eight had privately-funded disability insurance). Forty-one patients had undergone a total of sixty-four previous operations (mean, 1.5; range, one to four) prior to the use of external spinal skeletal fixation.
    Instrumentation levels were determined on the basis of the results of concordantly painful discograms in fifty-five patients, temporary pain relief after facet blocks in thirty-eight, severe disc degeneration in six, spondylolisthesis in three, and previous fracture in one. The external fixation included the fourth lumbar to first sacral levels in fifty-two patients, the fifth lumbar to first sacral levels in sixteen, the fourth and fifth lumbar levels in eight, the third lumbar to first sacral levels in twelve, and other levels in fifteen. Instrumentation extended as far cephalad as the eleventh thoracic level.
    All of the external spinal skeletal fixation procedures performed by the author in the study period are reported. Standard surgical consent as well as informed consent to enrollment in the trial was required of all patients. The devices were inserted and assembled with the patient under general anesthesia on an inpatient basis. Because we had no intraoperative neurological monitoring system (such as somatosensory evoked potentials or motor evoked potentials) at our hospital, anesthesia was administered without muscle relaxation so that a "twitch" might be observed if an external fixation screw irritated a nerve root. All patients received a single intravenous dose of a first-generation cephalosporin antibiotic preoperatively. Under fluoroscopic control, Schanz screws with a 6-mm shaft and 5-mm thread diameter (Synthes Canada, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada) were inserted down the pedicles of the vertebrae at the extremes of the proposed arthrodesis. Four screws were inserted in each patient; for example, for a proposed fourth lumbar-to-first sacral arthrodesis, two screws each were inserted at the fourth lumbar vertebra and at the first sacral vertebra. The screws were driven across the vertebral body to engage the anterior vertebral cortex for optimal purchase. Radiolucent components from the AO large tubular external fixator set (Synthes Canada) were coupled to them and assembled as a quadrilateral frame (Fig. 1). The Schanz pin interfaces with the skin were sealed with collodion (pyroxylin; Glaxo, Canada, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada) prior to application of a dry gauze dressing.
    Patients were discharged from the hospital as soon as they were independently mobile, usually on the morning after fixator application. The outcome parameters of the external spinal skeletal fixation test consisted of the patient’s subjective report of pain relief during routine daily activity, as assessed with an interview at the two-week postoperative clinic visit, and scores determined with the system of Prolo et al.16 prior to external spinal skeletal fixation and at the time of the last follow-up.
    Routine pin-site care was not performed postoperatively other than for a single change of the dry gauze operative dressing, if bleeding had soiled it, at the time of discharge from the hospital. Patients were asked to keep the fixator dry, and showering and immersion in water were forbidden.
    For the first sixty-three patients, parenteral antibiotic therapy was continued for twenty-four hours and then no additional prophylaxis was given. For the subsequent forty patients, a change in protocol was prompted by the alarming results reported by Soini and Seitsalo17 and my own experience with a case of a screw-track abscess. Oral antistaphylococcal prophylaxis was begun immediately after the surgical procedure in these patients and was continued for the duration of the external spinal skeletal fixation test. Also, the pins were sealed with antibacterial ointment (Polysporin [polymyxin B sulfate and bacitracin zinc]). Implants were removed with the patient under local or no anesthesia on an outpatient basis at two weeks.
    Patients who did not experience pain relief or who had temporarily increased pain during the external spinal skeletal fixation test were assumed to have nonstructural back pain and were discharged from surgical care to regional chronic pain clinics. Subsequent posterolateral arthrodesis (with iliac wing autograft and translaminar or pedicle screw and rod instrumentation) was planned for all patients who experienced pain relief during the external spinal skeletal fixation test. The operation was deferred for a minimum of six weeks to allow for complete pin-track healing.
    Fusions were considered solid when continuous trabeculated bone was present between the transverse processes and independent reviewers on the radiology staff confirmed the presence of stable implants without lucency or fracture. All patients who did not have fusion underwent a reoperation for pseudarthrosis repair. The benefit of the arthrodesis was analyzed with use of the Prolo functional scores16 at baseline and at the time of the most recent follow-up.
    In the period from January 1989 through September 1999, 103 external spinal skeletal fixation procedures were attempted, and 100 were successfully completed. Three procedures could not be accomplished for technical reasons. In two patients, the pedicles at the fourth lumbar level were too small to accept the 5-mm threaded portion of the Schanz screws, and, in another, the hypoplastic fifth lumbar pedicles could not be visualized fluoroscopically. The duration of follow-up after the external spinal skeletal fixation test averaged 24.5 months (range, one to 118 months). Forty patients in whom the test did not relieve pain were followed for only the one-month period required to confirm uncomplicated primary healing of the pin sites, and then they were discharged to nonsurgical care and not studied further. Sixty surgical candidates remained. At the time of writing, eleven patients who had experienced temporary pain relief from the external spinal skeletal fixation procedure and thus were thought to qualify for arthrodesis had either not yet or only just recently undergone arthrodesis. The remaining forty-nine patients were observed for an average of forty-one months (range, thirteen to 118 months) after arthrodesis.
    Neurological complications occurred in only two external spinal skeletal fixation procedures (2%). In one case, a twitch of the buttock (suggesting lumbosacral nerve root irritation) was observed during sacral screw insertion, but this patient was neurologically normal and asymptomatic postoperatively. Another patient awoke with unilateral radicular symptoms (no neurological deficit) after one side of the external spinal skeletal fixation frame was inadvertently assembled in compression. These symptoms were incompletely relieved by removal of the device. A subsequent computed tomography scan confirmed that all of the screw tracks were well centered in the pedicles and completely intraosseous. This patient’s back pain had been relieved by the external spinal skeletal fixation, and he had definitive pain relief after a successful fusion. However, residual, nondisabling radicular symptoms were still present at the time of the latest follow-up, at nineteen months.
    Of the forty-nine patients undergoing arthrodesis, only twenty-seven (55%) experienced sufficient relief of symptoms to have meaningful functional benefit after a mean duration of follow-up of forty-seven months (range, twelve to 101 months). Their mean Prolo score increased from 5 to 7. Eighteen patients (37%) had no change in their Prolo score after the arthrodesis, and four patients (8%) had a decrease in the mean score, from 6 to 4.
    Twenty-nine patients were not covered by disability insurance. Of these, fifteen did not experience pain relief during the external spinal skeletal fixation test, and the test was aborted in one patient when a fourth lumbar pedicle was found to be hypoplastic. Thirteen patients who were not covered by disability insurance and had pain relief with external spinal skeletal fixation had a successful spinal fusion. At a mean of forty-five months (range, twelve to 105 months), only ten of these thirteen patients had notable pain relief, as evidenced by an increase in their mean Prolo score from 4 at baseline to 8 at the final review. The Prolo scores of the remaining three patients did not change.
    There were infections in four of the initial sixty-three patients who had parenteral antibiotic therapy continued for only twenty-four hours. Screw-track infections developed in three patients; the infections responded to dressing changes and oral antibiotics prescribed on an ambulatory basis. A subcutaneous abscess developed in one patient, who required hospital admission for incision and drainage in addition to parenteral antibiotics. There was only a single superficial screw-track infection among the forty patients who received more comprehensive prophylaxis, but this reduction in the rate of infectious complications was not significant (p < 0.4, Fisher exact test).
    Asingle surgeon with experience with the technique performed all of the 103 external spinal skeletal fixation procedures; therefore, the series does not contain the so-called "toe" of the investigator’s learning curve. Nonetheless, in three patients, anatomical constraints precluded successful percutaneous Schanz-screw insertion.
    The successful external spinal skeletal fixation procedures provided temporary pain relief in 60% (sixty) of 100 patients with chronic back pain in the present study. However, despite that pain relief, only 55% (twenty-seven) of forty-nine patients with sufficient follow-up had definitive benefit from a subsequent anatomically successful fusion with bone graft and posterior instrumentation. Even in the potentially optimal candidate subgroup of uninsured patients, only ten of thirteen patients had pain relief after the arthrodesis.
    These results are similar to but certainly not superior to those reported in the literature1-3. Data pooled from similar clinical series of patients reported on in sufficient detail to allow analysis (excluding my earlier report12) demonstrated definitive long-term pain relief in only 36% (173) of 482 patients who had an anatomically successful spinal arthrodesis after experiencing temporary pain relief with external spinal skeletal fixation6-10.
    The infrequent occurrence of neurological complications in this series (two of 100 patients) is consistent with that of other reports, in which neurological complications occurred in twenty-six (5%) of 514 instrumentation procedures4-10,17,18. Anatomical studies have shown that fluoroscopic guidance does not always lead to optimal or safe percutaneous pedicle screw placement19. The rate of infection in this series was relatively low (5%) and similar to the rates reported by most previous authors4-10,13,14,18.
    External spinal skeletal fixation was conceived as a diagnostic tool to increase accuracy in the selection of candidates for relief of low-back pain by lumbar arthrodesis. The results of this study demonstrate that the procedure is not without serious complications and that subsequent arthrodeses are no more successful than those following more orthodox and less invasive diagnostic procedures. Because of its poor predictive value for back pain relief, external spinal skeletal fixation should not be used as a diagnostic test to identify candidates for lumbar arthrodesis.
    Note: The author acknowledges the assistance of Constantina Nanos in assembling database information and Dr. Mohit Bhandari for statistical analysis.
    Frymoyer JW. Back pain and sciatica. N Engl J Med,1988;318: 291-30. 318291  1988  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Hanley EN Jr, David SM. Current concepts review. Lumbar arthrodesis for the treatment of back pain. J Bone Joint Surg Am,1999;81: 716-30. 81716  1999  [PubMed]
     
    Turner JA, Ersek M, Herron L, Haselkorn J, Kent D, Ciol MA, Deyo R. Patient outcomes after lumbar spinal fusions. JAMA,1992;268: 907-11. 268907  1992  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Magerl FP. Stabilization of the lower thoracic and lumbar spine with external skeletal fixation.. Clin Orthop,1984;189: 125-41. 189125  1984  [PubMed]
     
    Olerud S, Sjostrom L, Karlstrom G, Hamberg M. Spontaneous effect of increased stability of the lower lumbar spine in cases of severe chronic back pain. The answer of an external transpeduncular fixation test.. Clin Orthop,1986;203: 67-7. 20367  1986  [PubMed]
     
    Esses SI, Botsford DJ, Kostuik JP. The role of external spinal skeletal fixation in the assessment of low-back disorders. Spine,1989;14: 594-601. 14594  1989  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Faraj AA, Akasha K, Mulholland RC. Temporary external fixation for low back pain: is it worth doing?. Eur Spine J,1997;6: 187-90. 6187  1997  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Jeanneret B, Jovanovic M, Magerl F. Percutaneous diagnostic stabilization for low back pain. Correlation with results after fusion operations. Clin Orthop,1994;304: 130-8. 304130  1994  [PubMed]
     
    Soini J, Slatis P, Kannisto M, Sandelin J. External transpedicular fixation test of the lumbar spine correlates with the outcome of subsequent lumbar fusion. Clin Orthop,1993;293: 89-96. 29389  1993  [PubMed]
     
    van der Schaaf DB, van Limbeek J, Pavlov PW. Temporary external transpedicular fixation of the lumbosacral spine. Spine,1999;24: 481-5. 24481  1999  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Axelsson P, Johnsson R, Stromqvist B. Mechanics of the external fixation test in the lumbar spine. A roentgen stereophotogrammetric analysis. Spine,1996;21: 330-3. 21330  1996  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Bednar DA, Raducan V. External spinal skeletal fixation in the management of back pain. Clin Orthop,1996;322: 131-9.. 322131  1996  [PubMed]
     
    Sahni IK, Hipp JA, Kirking BC, Alexander JW, Esses SI. Use of percutaneous transpedicular external fixation pins to measure intervertebral motion. Spine,1999;24: 1890-3. 241890  1999  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Schläpfer F, Wörsdörfer O, Magerl F, Perren SM. Stabilization of the lower thoracic and lumbar spine: comparative in vitro investigation of an external skeletal and various internal fixation devices. In: Uhthoff HK, Stahl E, editors. Current concepts of external fixation of fractures. New York: Springer; 1982. p 367. 
     
    Edwards AG, McNally DS, Mulholland RC, Goodship AE. The effects of posterior fixation on internal intervertebral disc mechanics. J Bone Joint Surg Br,1997;79: 154-60. 79154  1997  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Prolo DJ, Oklund SA, Butcher M. Toward uniformity in evaluating results of lumbar spine operations. A paradigm applied to posterior interbody fusions. Spine,1986;11: 601-6. 11601  1986  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Soini JR, Seitsalo SK. The external fixation test of the lumbar spine. 30 complications in 25 of 100 consecutive patients. Acta Orthop Scand,1993;64: 147-9. 64147  1993  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Axelsson P, Johnsson R, Stromqvist B, Andreasson H. External pedicular fixation of the lumbar spine: outcome evaluation by functional tests. J Spinal Disord,1999;12: 147-50. 12147  1999  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Wiesner L, Kothe R, Ruther W. Anatomic evaluation of two different techniques for the percutaneous insertion of pedicle screws in the lumbar spine. Spine,1999;24: 1599-603. 241599  1999  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     

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    Anchor for JumpAnchor for Jump
    +Fig. 1:Photograph of a patient with a quadrilateral external spinal skeletal fixation frame in place.
    Frymoyer JW. Back pain and sciatica. N Engl J Med,1988;318: 291-30. 318291  1988  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Hanley EN Jr, David SM. Current concepts review. Lumbar arthrodesis for the treatment of back pain. J Bone Joint Surg Am,1999;81: 716-30. 81716  1999  [PubMed]
     
    Turner JA, Ersek M, Herron L, Haselkorn J, Kent D, Ciol MA, Deyo R. Patient outcomes after lumbar spinal fusions. JAMA,1992;268: 907-11. 268907  1992  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Magerl FP. Stabilization of the lower thoracic and lumbar spine with external skeletal fixation.. Clin Orthop,1984;189: 125-41. 189125  1984  [PubMed]
     
    Olerud S, Sjostrom L, Karlstrom G, Hamberg M. Spontaneous effect of increased stability of the lower lumbar spine in cases of severe chronic back pain. The answer of an external transpeduncular fixation test.. Clin Orthop,1986;203: 67-7. 20367  1986  [PubMed]
     
    Esses SI, Botsford DJ, Kostuik JP. The role of external spinal skeletal fixation in the assessment of low-back disorders. Spine,1989;14: 594-601. 14594  1989  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Faraj AA, Akasha K, Mulholland RC. Temporary external fixation for low back pain: is it worth doing?. Eur Spine J,1997;6: 187-90. 6187  1997  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Jeanneret B, Jovanovic M, Magerl F. Percutaneous diagnostic stabilization for low back pain. Correlation with results after fusion operations. Clin Orthop,1994;304: 130-8. 304130  1994  [PubMed]
     
    Soini J, Slatis P, Kannisto M, Sandelin J. External transpedicular fixation test of the lumbar spine correlates with the outcome of subsequent lumbar fusion. Clin Orthop,1993;293: 89-96. 29389  1993  [PubMed]
     
    van der Schaaf DB, van Limbeek J, Pavlov PW. Temporary external transpedicular fixation of the lumbosacral spine. Spine,1999;24: 481-5. 24481  1999  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Axelsson P, Johnsson R, Stromqvist B. Mechanics of the external fixation test in the lumbar spine. A roentgen stereophotogrammetric analysis. Spine,1996;21: 330-3. 21330  1996  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Bednar DA, Raducan V. External spinal skeletal fixation in the management of back pain. Clin Orthop,1996;322: 131-9.. 322131  1996  [PubMed]
     
    Sahni IK, Hipp JA, Kirking BC, Alexander JW, Esses SI. Use of percutaneous transpedicular external fixation pins to measure intervertebral motion. Spine,1999;24: 1890-3. 241890  1999  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Schläpfer F, Wörsdörfer O, Magerl F, Perren SM. Stabilization of the lower thoracic and lumbar spine: comparative in vitro investigation of an external skeletal and various internal fixation devices. In: Uhthoff HK, Stahl E, editors. Current concepts of external fixation of fractures. New York: Springer; 1982. p 367. 
     
    Edwards AG, McNally DS, Mulholland RC, Goodship AE. The effects of posterior fixation on internal intervertebral disc mechanics. J Bone Joint Surg Br,1997;79: 154-60. 79154  1997  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Prolo DJ, Oklund SA, Butcher M. Toward uniformity in evaluating results of lumbar spine operations. A paradigm applied to posterior interbody fusions. Spine,1986;11: 601-6. 11601  1986  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Soini JR, Seitsalo SK. The external fixation test of the lumbar spine. 30 complications in 25 of 100 consecutive patients. Acta Orthop Scand,1993;64: 147-9. 64147  1993  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Axelsson P, Johnsson R, Stromqvist B, Andreasson H. External pedicular fixation of the lumbar spine: outcome evaluation by functional tests. J Spinal Disord,1999;12: 147-50. 12147  1999  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
    Wiesner L, Kothe R, Ruther W. Anatomic evaluation of two different techniques for the percutaneous insertion of pedicle screws in the lumbar spine. Spine,1999;24: 1599-603. 241599  1999  [PubMed][CrossRef]
     
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