Abstract
Introduction
To reduce the risk of adjacent segment disease and other procedure-related complications following anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF), cervical disk arthroplasty (CDA) has been advocated for one-level cervical disk disease. However, it remains unknown whether CDA decreases the occurrence of such complications. As such, the following study addressed a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials assessing the efficacy of CDA in reducing adjacent segment disease and other complications in comparison to ACDF.
Materials and Methods
Three reviewers performed a literature search for randomized controlled trials comparing CDA to ACDF for radiculopathy and/or myelopathy for one-level cervical disk disease. Studies with 2 years or greater follow-up were selected. Adjacent segment disease, secondary surgery (i.e., revision, reoperation, instrumentation/graft removal), and adverse events were assessed and pooled for analyses.
Results
Eight studies were included for review. Due to limitations with study design, studies presented with Level II evidence. CDA exhibited a decrease risk for reoperation attributed to adjacent segment disease, but was not statistically significant (p > 0.05). Additional procedure-related complications did not statistically differ between groups (p > 0.05).
Conclusion
Up to 4-year follow-up, CDA does not significantly reduce the risk of adjacent segment disease and other complications in comparison to ACDF. Due to the lack of blinding, variation in surgical management and relatively high withdrawal/drop-out rates among studies at 2 and 4 year follow-up, robust conclusions supporting the advocacy of CDA over ACDF cannot be made at this stage. High-quality studies are needed to properly assess the true efficacy of such interventions.
Yes
None declared
