INTRODUCTION
Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) as a treatment for cervical spondylotic disease has been shown to be over 90% successful as treatment for radiculopathy and/or myelopathy.Reference Bohlman, Emery, Goodfellow and Jones 1 Due to its effectiveness, the consequences of this procedure have been thought to be of secondary importance.Reference Hilibrand and Robbins 2 However, in their seminal paper, Hilibrand et al. reported a 3% annual incidence and 26% 10-year prevalence of cervical spine CASP.Reference Hilibrand, Carlson, Palumbo, Jones and Bohlman 3 As a result, the consequences of this procedure are likely more important than once thought. Controversy exists surrounding CASP etiology and pathophysiology, whether it is due to the altered mechanical stress of a fusion segment on adjacent levels, or to patient propensity to develop progressive degenerative change. To further our understanding of this relationship we compare the prevalence of CASP and RASP in traumatic and spondylotic patient cohorts.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Ethics approval from the local institutional Health and Research Ethics Board was received for the completion of this study. Operative records and operative billing codes were searched for all patients having undergone a cervical fusion procedure performed by the local group of neurosurgeons between 2004 and 2008, to allow for at least five years follow-up. Chart review and an EMR database were used to collect patient clinical and demographic information, including patient age, gender, date of operation, operation performed, operative indication, and history of lumbar spine surgery for degenerative disease. The picture archive and communication system (PACS) was used to gather all pre-operative and post-operative radiological data for each case from plain radiographs (XR) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the cervical spine, including disc space height, end-plate sclerosis, osteophytosis, and intervertebral disc herniation with/without neural compression. Patients under eighteen years old, and patients with a pathological fracture (related to neoplastic or infectious etiology), ankylosing spondylitis, or DISH were excluded. Fifty male and fifty female patients undergoing elective cervical decompression and fusion procedures were included after identification through operative billing codes from 2004 to 2008, and age-matched to the trauma cohort. Patients were divided into two cohorts for comparison based on the initial operative indication: either traumatic instability, or elective decompression and fusion due to radiculopathy or myelopathy.
The occurrence of CASP was defined as a patient requiring a repeat operation for occurrence of radiculopathy/myelopathy at an adjacent cervical level. To limit ascertainment bias, trauma patients included were contacted to determine whether or not they had undergone repeat operation at another institution. Occurrence of RASP was quantified using a radiographic assessment scale previously shown to be both a reliable and objective tool for assessing cervical disc and facet joint degeneration. Because this scale has also proved to be experience- and discipline-independent, no inter-rater analysis was completed.Reference Walraevens, Liu and Meersschaert 4 The use and assessment of disc space height, extent of osteophyte formation, and degree of endplate sclerosis is a common and established method of quantifying cervical degeneration among published grading systems.Reference Walraevens, Liu and Meersschaert 4 , Reference Coric, Nunley and Guyer 5 RASP was classified as none, mild, moderate, or severe.Reference Walraevens, Liu and Meersschaert 4 Only patients demonstrating a two grade increase in degeneration were classified as having RASP; patients with moderate degeneration prior to surgery required only a one grade increase to be classified as having RASP (as previously reported).Reference Coric, Nunley and Guyer 5 A Fisher’s Exact Test was used to detect a statistically significant difference between the two cohorts for: prevalence of CASP, prevalence of RASP, prevalence of lumbar spine surgery, and gender. A t-test was used to compare age and follow-up period. Statistical significance was set at a p-value of less than 0.05.
The incidence and prevalence of CASP were calculated for each year using a life-table method and construction of a Kaplan-Meier survivorship curve.Reference Hilibrand, Carlson, Palumbo, Jones and Bohlman 3 , Reference Dinse and Lagakos 6 , Reference Kaplan and Meier 7 The prevalence of CASP was defined as the proportion of patients who developed CASP over the given follow-up period. The annual incidence was defined as the proportion of patients, initially disease-free at the beginning of a year and subsequently developed CASP. Several studies have shown that patients who develop CASP also have a propensity for developing degenerative disease elsewhere in their spine.Reference Jawahar, Cavanaugh, Kerr, Birdsong and Nunley 8 Thus the number of lumbar spine operations for degenerative disease was recorded as a surrogate marker for CASP development and RASP.
RESULTS
Forty-six traumatic cervical fusion patients were identified. Baseline characteristics are outlined in Table 1. The mean and median age for the cohort was 45.6 and 47 years, respectively. The majority of patients were male (37/46, 80.4%). The average length of follow-up was 6.4 years. A total of 51 procedures were completed: 32 via an anterior approach, 14 via a posterior approach, and 5 additional operations for delayed instability after anterior approach requiring circumferential stabilization. The majority of trauma patients identified had undergone a single-level fusion (91.3%). There were no patients identified who required repeat operation for CASP development, nor were any identified who had undergone a separate lumbar spine surgery for degenerative disease. Thirty-two patients (70.0%) had radiological imaging completed at a mean time of 25 months and median 13 months (range 4-83 months) post-operatively. One patient (3.1%) had developed RASP.
One hundred consecutive patients (50 male and 50 female) undergoing single-level ACDF for spondylotic disease between 2004 and 2008 were included. Baseline characteristics for these patients are outlined in Table 1. The mean and median age were 49.9 and 50-years old, respectively. The average length of follow-up was 7.1 years. A total of 114 procedures were completed: 110 via an anterior approach, and 4 via a posterior approach. Ten patients (10.0%) required a second operation at a mean 3.6-years after the index operation for CASP development. Two patients required a third operation for CASP at a mean 7 years after the index operation. Seven patients (7.0%) had also had lumbar spine surgery for degenerative disease. All patients had radiological imaging completed at a mean time of 38 months and median 33 months post-operatively (range, 2-122 months). Twenty patients (20.0%) had developed RASP.
In comparing the two cohorts, there was a higher proportion of males in the trauma group (80.4% vs. 50.0%, p<0.01). However, no significant difference was found in CASP development between genders in the entire patient population (4/87 males vs. 6/59 females, p=0.32), nor in the degenerative cohort (4/50 males vs. 6/50 females, p=0.74). As such, the difference in gender between cohorts was not corrected for upon final analysis. There was a longer follow-up period in the degenerative cohort (6.4 years for the traumatic cohort vs. 7.1 years for the spondylotic cohort, p<0.01). This difference, however, was not thought to be clinically significant; it was not corrected for in the analysis. Furthermore, a statistical difference was found between the two cohorts with respect to posterior and circumferential fixation (p<0.01), but since previous studies have not shown a relationship between surgical approach and CASP this was also not corrected for.Reference Acikbas, Ermol, Akyuz and Tuncer 9 - Reference Lunsford, Bissonette and Zorub 12 There was also no significant difference in age between the two groups (p=0.17).
Although a higher overall number of patients underwent lumbar spine surgery in the degenerative cohort (7/100 vs. 0/46), this did not reach statistical significance (p=0.1). A post-hoc analysis found the power for the relationship between cervical CASP and patients also having lumbar spine surgery to be 0.17. This indicates that many more patients would be required to properly determine if a relationship exists between the two factors. However, as shown in Table 2, there was a significant difference found in the number of patients requiring repeat operation for CASP development in the spondylotic patient cohort (10/100 vs. 0/46, p=0.03). Furthermore, significantly more spondylotic patients demonstrated RASP (20/100 vs. 1/32, p=0.03).
Discussion
Robinson and Smith were among the first to describe ACDF as a treatment for cervical spondylotic disease over 50-years ago.Reference Smith and Robinson 13 Due to its effectiveness, the long-term consequences of this procedure were once thought to be of minor importance.Reference Hilibrand and Robbins 2 However, due to substantial rates of CASP development post-operatively, more emphasis and research is being done to investigate causes, risk factors, and treatment thereof. The primary purpose of this study was to further explore this issue and delineate the relationship between CASP development and iatrogenic fusion compared to spondylotic disease progression. Here we discuss reoperation due to CASP, coincident lumbar spine surgery, and RASP in traumatic and spondylotic patient cohorts.
CASP Development
CASP has been shown to develop at a relatively constant 3% annual incidence with a projected 26% of patients being affected over 10 years.Reference Bohlman, Emery, Goodfellow and Jones 1 - Reference Hilibrand, Carlson, Palumbo, Jones and Bohlman 3 , Reference Henderson, Hennessy, Shuey and Shackelford 10 , Reference Lunsford, Bissonette, Jannetta, Sheptak and Zorub 11 , Reference Gore and Sepic 14 , Reference Williams, Allen and Harkess 15 These values include those that are treated via non-operative methods. The prevalence of CASP requiring reoperation, however, has previously varied between 9% and 17%.Reference Bohlman, Emery, Goodfellow and Jones 1 - Reference Hilibrand, Carlson, Palumbo, Jones and Bohlman 3 , Reference Gore and Sepic 14 , Reference Williams and Harkes 16 This results in 1.5%-4.0% of patients requiring reoperation for CASP annually. The corresponding annual incidence calculated here was also in keeping with this range (Figures 1 and 2). In this study we found that 10% of elective ACDF patients required reoperation for CASP development, compared to 0% of trauma patients. Our results are on the lower end of what has been reported.
Several explanations could account for this difference, including differing practice patterns locally versus elsewhere. For example, local spine surgeons may simply be more conservative in managing this problem. The definition of CASP traditionally includes patients that develop the disease and are treated non-operatively (or conservatively), leading to our reoperation rate for CASP being lower than elsewhere. Furthermore, the length of patient follow-up not only differs from that in other studies, but also slightly between the two cohorts. Although we believe that the difference between 6.4 and 7.1 years is not clinically significant, it is possible that a shorter follow-up time biases our results.
Ascertainment bias may also partially explain this difference. Our rate of reoperation in the degenerative group may be an underestimation. Although all of the trauma patients were contacted to determine whether they had undergone reoperation for CASP elsewhere (and thus not captured in our review), the spondylotic patients were not. This potential bias, however, could have lead to an underestimation of CASP in the degenerative group, which would only serve to strengthen our findings of the difference between groups.
Lumbar Spine Surgery
Lumbar spine surgery for degenerative disc disease has been found to be a risk factor for CASP development in the cervical spine.Reference Nunley, Jawahar, Cavanaugh, Gordon, Kerr and Utter 17 This is presumably due to patients developing CASP also having a propensity to develop arthritic change elsewhere in the spine. Here, 7% of patients in the degenerative cohort also had undergone lumbar spine surgery due to degenerative disease, compared to 0% in the traumatic group. Although this did not reach statistical significance, there is a trend toward patients undergoing fusion for elective purposes also requiring lumbar spinal surgery for spondylosis. This was probably due to insufficient patient numbers, as supported by a post-hoc power analysis.
RASP Development
Reported rates of RASP are quite variable. Baba et al. demonstrated a 25% incidence of new canal stenosis at adjacent segments over an average follow-up of 8.5 years.Reference Baba, Furusawa, Imura, Kawahara, Tsuchiya and Tomita 18 Similarly, it has been shown that 25% of patients will develop new spondylosis, and an additional 25% will experience progression of pre-existing spondylosis.Reference Gore and Sepic 14 In our study, 20% of patients demonstrated evidence of RASP. Although there is wide variability in the literature (10 - 84%),Reference Jawahar, Cavanaugh, Kerr, Birdsong and Nunley 8 , Reference Maldonado, Paz and Martin 19 - Reference Park, Cho and Riew 25 this study’s findings are on the lower end of what has been reported. Several explanations can account for this. Average radiographic follow-up was just over three years. With longer follow-up it is possible that this rate would increase. However, this is not necessarily borne out in the literature. For example, some studies report higher rates with less follow-up.Reference Kulkarni, Rajshekhar and Raghuram 20 , Reference Garrido, Wilhite and Nakano 22 – Reference Park, Cho and Riew 25 Different studies have also made use of different radiographic scoring scales, many subject to varying degrees of inter-rater reliability.Reference Hilibrand, Carlson, Palumbo, Jones and Bohlman 3 , Reference Coric, Nunley and Guyer 5 , Reference Elsawaf, Mastronardi, Roperto, Bozzao, Caroli and Ferrante 26 - Reference Ishihara, Kanamori, Kawaguchi, Nakamura and Kimura 29 We used a radiographic scoring scale shown to be a reliable and objective tool for assessing cervical disc and facet degeneration; it was previously used in total disc arthroplasty trials.Reference Walraevens, Liu and Meersschaert 4 , Reference Coric, Nunley and Guyer 5 Furthermore, RASP development was found to be higher in the spondylotic than in the traumatic patient group. However, radiological follow-up between the two groups also varied. It is possible that with more uniform follow-up between the two groups RASP development would have been more similar as well. Many factors could account for this difference in follow-up, including a higher number of patients in the degenerative group requiring repeat operation. Patients requiring re-operation would have undergone more imaging studies at later time points. However, if they did not require repeat operation, only one post-operative radiograph at their first follow-up appointment would likely have been completed (accounting for a large range within the group). Furthermore, trauma patients have also been found to have a higher likelihood of being lost to follow-up, for numerous reasons.Reference Aaland, Marose and Zhu 30 , Reference Overton, Shafi and Gandhi 31 This could also in part explain the difference seen between the two groups’ follow-up and RASP development.
Limitations
This is a retrospective study and as a result prone to innate biases. Moreover, it is a single center, single observer study. There were also technical differences between cohorts with respect to the type of operation, number of levels fused, and use of instrumentation. Specifically, there was a minority of trauma patients who required multi-level fusions and were fused posteriorly, which was not accounted for in our analysis. However, previous studies show no definitive evidence to suggest that these factors play a role in CASP development.Reference Hilibrand, Carlson, Palumbo, Jones and Bohlman 3 , Reference Acikbas, Ermol, Akyuz and Tuncer 9 , Reference Lunsford, Bissonette, Jannetta, Sheptak and Zorub 11 , Reference Bydon, Xu and Macki 32 , Reference Hannallah, White, Fassett, Kerr, Whang and Hilibrand 33 Finally, this study did not account for patient factors shown to influence CASP development such as the specific number of levels fused or smoking status. Accounting for all of these factors in the analysis with identification of independent risk factors through multivariate analysis would be ideal. A scoring scale to stratify a patient’s risk of developing CASP based on their individual pre-operative risk factors could then be created in order to better counsel patients when obtaining informed consent. However, large sample sizes and/or increased effect sizes would be required in order to perform this kind of statistical analysis with subsequent internal and external validation.
Conclusion
ACDF is the preferred surgical approach for cervical spondylotic disease under most circumstances. As a consequence, however, some patients will go on to develop CASP and potentially require reoperation. The etiology and pathophysiology of CASP remain poorly understood. Cervical spondylotic patients were found to have a higher rate of repeat surgery for CASP and radiological adjacent segment degeneration than patients fused for traumatic instability. This finding suggests that the cause of CASP is likely more related to patient factors predisposing to progressive degenerative disease and not mechanical stress related factors.
Disclosures
Andrew Jack, Godefroy Hardy St-Pierre, and Andrew Nataraj do not have anything to disclose.