Otros
The clinical course of pain and disability following surgery for spinal stenosis: a systematic review and meta-analysis of cohort studies
Fecha
2017-02-01Registro en:
European Spine Journal, v. 26, n. 2, p. 324-335, 2017.
1432-0932
0940-6719
10.1007/s00586-016-4668-0
2-s2.0-84979258027
2-s2.0-84979258027.pdf
Autor
The University of Sydney
Universidade Federal de Ciências da Saúde de Porto Alegre
University of Sydney
University of New South Wales
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Erasmus MC
Institución
Resumen
Purpose: The aim of this study was to assess the clinical course of pain and disability in patients with lumbar spinal stenosis following surgery. Methods: Electronic databases were searched to July 2014 and only prospective cohort studies assessing pain or disability following surgery for lumbar spinal stenosis were included. Two independent reviewers extracted data and assessed study quality. Estimates of pain and disability (expressed as 0–100 point scales) as well as 95 % confidence intervals were obtained using meta-regression. The effect of time was clearly non-linear, so it was modelled using fractional polynomial regression. Results: From a total of 10,741 titles, 69 publications (64 cohort studies) were included in the review. Pooled estimate for pain pre-operatively was 63.4 (95 % CI 56.5; 70.3), reducing to 33.1 (95 % CI 24.2; 41.9) at 3 months and 19.2 points (95 % CI 9.2; 29.3) at 60 months. Pre-operative estimates of disability were 36.9 (95 % CI 32.6; 41.3), reducing to 16.3 (95 % CI 11.8; 20.9) at 3 months and 12.4 (95 % CI 7.7; 17.2) at 60 months. Conclusion: Patients with lumbar spinal stenosis experience rapid symptom reduction after surgery, but should still expect to experience mild-to-moderate pain and disability 60 months later.