AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to compare the effectiveness of stand-alone lateral lumbar interbody fusion (LLIF) versus LLIF combined with supplemental posterior instrumentation for treating lumbar degenerative disease through a meta-analysis of existing research.
  • A total of 15 studies involving 1,177 patients were analyzed, revealing that the posterior instrumentation group showed significantly better outcomes in terms of fusion rates, cage subsidence, disc height restoration, and overall improvement, despite having higher intraoperative blood loss in the stand-alone group.
  • The findings suggest that while both LLIF techniques benefit patients, those at risk for cage subsidence may achieve better results with the additional posterior instrumentation.

Article Abstract

Study Design: Systematic Review.

Objectives: Compare the outcomes of stand-alone lateral lumbar interbody fusion (LLIF) and LLIF with supplemental posterior instrumentation in the treatment of lumbar degenerative disease by a Meta-analysis.

Methods: In this meta-analysis, we searched Pubmed, Embase, and Cochrane databases from inception to Aug 2023. In this study, only study reporting stand-alone LLIF(stand-alone group) and LLIF with supplemental posterior instrumentation (posterior instrumentation group) in the treatment of lumbar degenerative disease and we excluded duplicate publications, research without full text, incomplete information or inability to conduct data extraction, animal experiments, reviews, and systematic reviews. STATA 15.1 software was used to analyze the data.

Results: Among the 15 included articles, the total number of patients was 1177, with 469 patients (638 fused segments) in the standalone group and 708 patients (1046 fused segments) in the posterior instrumentation group. The posterior instrumentation group was better than stand-alone group with significant differences in fusion rate, cage subsidence rate,the restoration of disc height and segmental lordosis, the improvement of ODI, and reoperation rate. While, comparing with posterior instrumentation group,the stand-alone group had less intraoperative blood loss.

Conclusions: Both stand-alone and instrumented LLIF were effective in improving the clinical outcomes of patients with lumbar degenerative disease. However, the stand-alone LLIF was associated with lower fusion rate, inferior maintenance of indirect decompression, and higher reoperation rate due to high-grade cage subsidence. For patients with risk factors of high-grade cage subsidence, the LLIF with posterior instrumentation may be a better choice.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11572041PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/21925682241268333DOI Listing

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