经皮影像引导腰椎减压术和门诊椎板切除术治疗腰椎管狭窄症:为期两年的医疗保险报销基准研究

Peter S. Staats , Michael J. Dorsi , David E. Reece , Natalie H. Strand , Lawrence Poree , Jonathan M. Hagedorn
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景这项前瞻性纵向研究比较了接受门诊经皮影像引导腰椎减压术(PILD)的医疗保险受益人与接受门诊椎板切除术的患者的治疗效果。所有患者均被诊断为腰椎管狭窄症(LSS)并伴有神经源性跛行(NC)。方法对100%的医疗保险受益人的所有医疗索赔进行审查,并使用医疗保险和医疗补助研究中心的可识别档案对研究对象进行识别。对基线数据进行单独提取,以便通过两年的随访进行纵向分析。指标手术被定义为入组期间的首次轻度或门诊椎板切除术。轻度患者的年龄明显偏大(分别为 76.7 岁和 73.4 岁;P < 0.0001),57.4%的轻度患者为女性,而椎板切除术患者中女性占 43.3%(p <0.0001)。轻度患者的基线合并症明显多于椎板切除术患者(平均分别为 5.7 对 4.8;p <0.0001)。轻度患者的后续手术率为 9.0%,明显高于椎板切除术的 5.5%(p <0.0001)。轻度患者的伤害率明显低于椎板切除术(分别为 1.9% 对 5.8%;p <0.0001)。轻度和椎板切除术的后续手术和伤害的复合率在两组之间相似,分别为10.8%和11.0%。结论从本研究的实际数据来看,轻度可被视为治疗患有NC的LSS的可行方案。两年后,轻度患者比椎板切除术患者受到的伤害更少,接受的后续手术更多。轻度患者接受后续手术的比例较高,这可能是因为轻度患者在LSS治疗算法中的位置较早。两组患者的总体伤害率和后续手术率相似,这表明轻度患者应被视为一种治疗选择,尤其是对于有多种并发症的老年患者。
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Percutaneous image-guided lumbar decompression and outpatient laminectomy for the treatment of lumbar spinal stenosis: a 2-year Medicare claims benchmark study

Background

This prospective longitudinal study compares outcomes for Medicare beneficiaries receiving outpatient percutaneous image-guided lumbar decompression (PILD) using the mild® procedure to patients undergoing outpatient laminectomy. All patients were diagnosed with lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) with neurogenic claudication (NC).

Methods

All medical claims for 100 % of Medicare beneficiaries were reviewed, with study subjects identified using Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Research Identifiable Files. Baseline data were extracted individually to allow for longitudinal analysis through two-year follow-up. The index procedure was defined as the first mild or outpatient laminectomy during the enrollment period. The rate of subsequent surgical procedures and incidence of harms were used as study outcomes.

Results

Cohorts included 2197 mild and 7416 laminectomy patients. mild patients were significantly older (76.7 years versus 73.4 years, respectively; p < 0.0001), and 57.4 % of mild were female, compared to 43.3 % of laminectomy (p < 0.0001). mild patients presented with significantly more baseline comorbidities compared to laminectomy patients (mean of 5.7 versus 4.8, respectively; p < 0.0001). Subsequent surgical procedure rate of 9.0 % for mild was significantly higher than 5.5 % for laminectomy (p < 0.0001). mild experienced harms at a significantly lower rate than laminectomy (1.9 % versus 5.8 %, respectively; p < 0.0001). The composite rate of subsequent surgical procedures and harms was similar between groups at 10.8 % for mild and 11.0 % for laminectomy.

Conclusions

mild can be considered a viable option for treatment of LSS with NC as evidenced by real-world data in this study. At two-years, mild patients experienced fewer harms and underwent more subsequent surgical procedures than laminectomy patients. The higher rate of subsequent surgical procedures for mild may be attributable to its position earlier in the LSS treatment algorithm. The overall rate of harms and subsequent surgical procedures was similar between groups, suggesting that mild should be considered as a treatment option, particularly for older patients with multiple comorbidities.

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