1 / 12

Institute for Cancer Research and Treatment Candiolo (TURIN) - Italy

Long-Term Data for 884 Patients Show Vertebroplasty for Osteoporotic Spinal Fractures Provides Dramatic Pain Relief, Greatly Decreases Disability. Giovanni Carlo ANSELMETTI, MD. Institute for Cancer Research and Treatment Candiolo (TURIN) - Italy. Percutaneous Vertebroplasty STUDY DESIGN.

stormy
Télécharger la présentation

Institute for Cancer Research and Treatment Candiolo (TURIN) - Italy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Long-Term Data for 884 Patients Show Vertebroplasty for Osteoporotic Spinal Fractures Provides Dramatic Pain Relief, Greatly Decreases Disability Giovanni Carlo ANSELMETTI, MD Institute for Cancer Research and Treatment Candiolo (TURIN) - Italy

  2. Percutaneous VertebroplastySTUDY DESIGN We prospectively evaluated back-pain improvement, new fracture rate and complications in a large series of Osteoporotic Patients underwent to Percutaneous Vertebroplasty for vertebral fracture refractory to conservative medical treatment

  3. Patients Populations884 Patients(750 female - 134 male mean age 73,1 years) • 639Primary Osteoporosis (72,3%) • 245Secondary to Steroidal therapy (27,7%) • Treated on 3954Vertebrae • All procedures in Local anesthesia • Patients discharged from the Hospital the same procedural day

  4. Clinical Evaluation • Pain was evaluatedusing a 11-point Visual Analogic Scale from 0 (no pain) to 10 (worst experienced pain)before and after the procedure. • Disability improvement was evaluated by external Brace support and Oswestry Disability Questionnaire before and after Vertebroplasty • If patients reported back-pain recurrence during follow-up clinical interview and MRI were performed to investigate new vertebral fracture

  5. Visual Analog Scale Pre e Post VTP884 patientsFollow-up up to 52 months P<0.0001 Wilcoxon signed rank Test SD±1,5 SD±1,8 845/884 patients(95,6%)reported backpain improvement

  6. Quality of Life after PVBrace supportFollow-up up to 52 months P<0.0001 McNemar’s Test

  7. Quality of Life Oswestry Disability Questionnaire884 Pts P<0.0001 Paired t test SD ±13,5% SD±6,9%

  8. New Fractures in Osteoporosis884 Patients - Follow-up up to 52 months During follow-up all patients were invited to contact us whenever backpain occurred again after PV. MR and plain radiograms showed a new vertebral fractures in: 106 patients (12%) Occurred 15 days to 36 months(mean 9,4±8,7 months) after previous Vertebroplasty They were all successfully retreated!

  9. New Fractures in OsteoporosisFracture on Contiguous vertebra73/106 patients (68,9%)

  10. RETREATMENTS in OsteoporosisNew Fracture during 18 months Follow-upVertebroplasty vs. Placebo & Teriparatide

  11. COMPLICATIONS18/884 patients (2%) • 12 (1,4%) asymptomatic pulmonary embolism • 6 (0,7%) nerve root irritation successfully treated by local steroidal injection Vertebroplasty was completed in all patients without any major complications

  12. CONCLUSIONS • Vertebroplasty is safe and effective in the treatment of back-pain due to osteoporotic vertebral collapses. • After Vertebroplasty patients can increase mobility and improve their quality of life. • New fracture rate seems to be similar to not PV-treated osteoporotic pts reported by literature. • Our data suggest that Vertebroplasty should always be proposed to patients when conservative medical treatment fails.

More Related