At a glance
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Cervical Spondylotic Myelopathy Surgical Trial
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Ventral (Front) decompression with Fusion, Dorsal (Back) Decompression with Fusion, and 1 other intervention for Cervical Spondylosis With Myelopathy. Active but no longer recruiting, targeting 269 participants across 16 sites in 2 countries.
Detailed Summary
The purpose of the study is to determine the optimal surgical approach (ventral vs dorsal) for patients with multi-level cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM). There are no established guidelines for the management of patients with CSM, which represents the most common cause of spinal cord injury and dysfunction in the US and in the world. This study aims to test the hypothesis that ventral surgery is associated with superior Short Form-36 physical component Score (SF-36 PCS) outcome at one year follow-up compared to dorsal approaches and that both ventral and dorsal surgery improve symptoms of spinal cord dysfunction measured using the modified Japanese Orthopedic Association Score (mJOA). A secondary hypothesis is that health resource utilization for ventral surgery, dorsal fusion, and laminoplasty surgery are different. A third hypothesis is that cervical sagittal balance post-operatively is a significant predictor of SF-36 PCS outcome.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
Ventral decompression and fusion will be performed using a multi-level discectomy (including partial or single level corpectomy) with fusion and plating. Allograft will be used at each disc space and all compressive osteophytes will be removed using the operating microscope. Fixation will be performed with rigid, semi-constrained, or dynamic titanium plates to optimize fusion and minimize complications.
Dorsal decompression and fusion will be performed using midline cervical laminectomy with the application of lateral mass screws and rods for rigid fixation. All surgeons will use local bone and allograft as needed to perform a lateral mass fusion, which typically will include one level rostral to the levels decompressed.
Laminoplasty will be performed using an open-door approach with the application of plates and screws at each treated level. Ceramic or allograft laminar spacers (surgeon's choice) can be used with plates and screws to expand the canal diameter.