关于内窥镜脊柱手术技术的 ISASS 网络研讨会系列的主要收获|第 4 部分:外科医生在复杂腰椎翻修方案、1 至 3 级椎体溶解性脊柱滑脱症、颈椎椎板切除术和颈椎病方面的经验曲线。

IF 1.7 Q2 SURGERY International Journal of Spine Surgery Pub Date : 2024-11-20 DOI:10.14444/8675
Kai-Uwe Lewandrowski, Christian Morgenstern, Martin Knight, Yi Jiang, Zhang Xifeng, Paulo Sergio Terxeira de Carvalho, Morgan P Lorio
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:由国际脊柱外科学会主办的四部分系列网络研讨会中的第四部分探讨了当代内窥镜脊柱外科技术。本次会议涵盖了复杂翻修策略、1-3级脊柱溶解性椎体滑脱的内窥镜治疗、颈椎椎板切开术以及颈椎脊髓病(CSM)的减压技术:目的:采用多定量拉施分析法评估外科医生在网络研讨会前后对所讨论的内窥镜脊柱手术技术的认可程度。此外,该分析还试图确定这些见解将如何影响临床指南的建议:网络研讨会有 868 名潜在参与者参加,在研讨会之前,我们分发了一份调查问卷,使用李克特量表收集有关各种技术支持程度的数据。通过评估与外科医生专业知识相关的决策复杂性,多矩 Rasch 模型对这些回答进行了分析。这种方法有助于制定一个对数量表,客观地分析分类回答,区分一致和不一致的项目,并有助于加强临床指南:在 868 名外科医生中,263 人访问了网络研讨会前调查,150 人开始了调查,118 人完成了调查,完成率为 78.7%。参与者主要是骨科医生(59.3%)和神经外科医生(34.7%),也包括住院医生(2.5%)、研究员(1.7%)和介入放射科医生(1.7%)。在网络研讨会后阶段,298 名参与者访问了调查问卷,169 人开始了调查,128 人完成了调查,完成率为 75.7%。网络研讨会后参与者的人口统计学特征与初始组十分相似:骨科医生占 66.4%,神经外科医生占 23.4%,住院医生占 3.6%,研究员占 2.9%,医学生占 0.7%,介入放射科医生占 2.9%。Rasch 分析证实,外科医生对颈椎后路椎板切开术和内窥镜治疗 1 至 3 级脊柱溶解性椎体滑脱症以及后路内窥镜减压治疗 CSM 有很高的信心。网络研讨会前和研讨会后的回答都显示出这些内窥镜技术与 Rasch 模型的良好拟合,表明偏差极小,并得到了差异项目功能分析的支持。内窥镜手术平台在邻近节段疾病的腰椎翻修手术或失败的椎体间融合套管和CSM后路减压等手术中的应用,在描述性和对数转换的Rasch统计中都显示出认可度几乎没有变化:本次网络研讨会突显了内窥镜脊柱手术最佳实践不断发展的共识,显示了内窥镜下脊柱溶解性滑脱的清创术、颈椎椎间盘突出和骨性狭窄的椎板切除术以及CSM的后路内窥镜减压术被广泛接受:临床相关性:使用多向性 Rasch 分析评估外科医生对内窥镜脊柱手术的信心和接受程度:证据级别:2级(推论性)和3级(观察性)证据,因为Rasch分析提供的是工具的统计验证,而不是直接的临床结果。
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Key Takeaways From ISASS Webinar Series on Endoscopic Spine Surgery Techniques | Part 4: Advancing the Curve on Surgeons' Experience With Complex Lumbar Revision Scenarios, Grades 1 to 3 Spondylolytic Spondylolisthesis, Cervical Foraminotomy, and Cervical Spondylotic Myelopathy.

Background: The fourth webinar in a 4-part series hosted by the International Society for the Advancement of Spine Surgery explored contemporary endoscopic spine surgery techniques. This session covered complex revision strategies, endoscopic management of grades 1-3 spondylolytic spondylolisthesis, cervical foraminotomy, and decompression techniques for cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM).

Objective: The aim was to assess surgeon endorsement of the discussed endoscopic spine surgery techniques both before and after the webinar using polytomous Rasch analysis. Additionally, the analysis sought to determine how these insights might shape clinical guideline recommendations.

Methods: Before the webinar, which was attended by 868 potential participants, a survey was distributed to collect data on the level of support for various techniques using a Likert scale. The polytomous Rasch model analyzed these responses by evaluating decision complexity relative to surgeon expertise. This approach helped develop a logarithmic scale to objectively analyze categorical responses, distinguish between congruent and incongruent items, and contribute to the enhancement of clinical guidelines.

Results: Of the 868 surgeons, 263 accessed, 150 started, and 118 completed the prewebinar survey, with a completion rate of 78.7%. The participants were mainly orthopedic surgeons (59.3%) and neurosurgeons (34.7%) but also included residents (2.5%), fellows (1.7%), and interventional radiologists (1.7%). In the postwebinar phase, 298 participants accessed the survey, 169 started it, and 128 completed it, achieving a 75.7% completion rate. The demographics of postwebinar participants closely mirrored the initial group: 66.4% orthopedic surgeons, 23.4% neurosurgeons, 3.6% residents, 2.9% fellows, 0.7% medical students, and 2.9% interventional radiologists. The Rasch analysis confirmed high surgeon confidence for the posterior cervical foraminotomy and endoscopic treatment of spondylolytic spondylolisthesis grades 1 to 3 and posterior endoscopic decompression for CSM. Both pre- and postwebinar responses showed a good fit to the Rasch model for these endoscopic techniques, indicating minimal bias, supported by differential item functioning analysis. The application of the endoscopic surgery platform for procedures such as lumbar revision surgery for adjacent segment disease or failed interbody fusion cages and posterior decompression of CSM saw little shift in endorsement, as evidenced both in descriptive and the logarithmically transformed Rasch statistics.

Conclusion: This webinar highlighted the evolving consensus on best practices in endoscopic spine surgery, displaying wide acceptance of endoscopic debridement of spondylolytic spondylolisthesis, cervical foraminotomy for herniated disc and bony stenosis, and posterior endoscopic decompression for CSM.

Clinical relevance: Assessing surgeon confidence and acceptance of endoscopic spinal surgeries using polytomous Rasch analysis.

Level of evidence: Level 2 (inferential) and 3 (observational) evidence because Rasch analysis provides statistical validation of instruments rather than direct clinical outcomes.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
162
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Spine Surgery is the official scientific journal of ISASS, the International Intradiscal Therapy Society, the Pittsburgh Spine Summit, and the Büttner-Janz Spinefoundation, and is an official partner of the Southern Neurosurgical Society. The goal of the International Journal of Spine Surgery is to promote and disseminate online the most up-to-date scientific and clinical research into innovations in motion preservation and new spinal surgery technology, including basic science, biologics, and tissue engineering. The Journal is dedicated to educating spine surgeons worldwide by reporting on the scientific basis, indications, surgical techniques, complications, outcomes, and follow-up data for promising spinal procedures.
期刊最新文献
Editorial: Embracing Rasch Analysis for Enhanced Spine Surgery Outcomes-The Outsider's Viewpoint. Editors' Introduction: High-Value Endoscopic Techniques: Integrating Surgeon Skill and Experience in Spine Surgery With Rasch Analysis. Invited Commentary: Rasch Analysis and High-Value Spinal Endoscopy. Letter to the Editor: Articles and Accompanying Editorials on Rasch Analysis of High-Value Endoscopic Surgeries-A Message From the ISASS Co-President. Letter to the Editor: Hierarchy of Evidence.
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