Restorative neurostimulation for chronic mechanical low back pain – Three year results from the United Kingdom post market clinical follow-up registry

Author:

Thomson Simon1ORCID,Williams Adam2,Vajramani Girish3,Sharma Manohar4,Love-Jones Sarah2,Chawla Rajiv45,Eldabe Sam6

Affiliation:

1. Simon Thomson, Mid and South Essex University NHSFT, Pain and Neuromodulation Orsett Hospital, Essex, UK

2. North Bristol NHS Trust, Westbury on Trym, UK

3. University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust, Southampton, UK

4. The Walton Centre NHS Foundation TrustLiverpool, Liverpool, UK

5. Pain Specialists Australia Melbourne, Richmond, VIC, Australia

6. Department of Pain Medicine, The James Cook University Hospital, Middlesbrough, UK

Abstract

Introduction Mechanical chronic low back pain is often associated with impaired neuromuscular control of the lumbar multifidus muscles, the most important stabilizers of the lumbar spine. Restorative neurostimulation is a modality for the treatment for this specific subset of patients aimed to facilitate restoration of neuromuscular control by bilateral stimulation of the L2 medial branches. Evidence from both prospective and randomised clinical trials to date has demonstrated substantial improvements in clinical outcomes such as pain, disability and health-related quality of life. Methods This study is an open label prospective follow-up for the treatment of chronic mechanical low back pain of nociceptive origin with restorative neurostimulation. Patients completed assessments for pain, disability and health-related quality of life. Outcomes were collected at 45, 90 and 180 days, and 1, 2 and 3 years after the activation visit. Results Forty-two patients were implanted with the device and 33 (79%) were available at the 3-year appointment. Patients in this cohort presented with severe chronic low back pain (NRS = 7.0 ± 0.2) and severe disability (ODI 46.6 ± 12.0). The health-related quality of life was also severely impacted at baseline (EQ-5D 0.426 ± 0.061). Changes in pain, disability and quality of life at three-year follow-up demonstrated a statistically significant improvement between baseline and 1, 2 and 3 years. After 3 years of therapy, average NRS scores had reduced to 2.7± 0.3 and mean ODI score to 26.0 ± 3.1 while EQ-5D-5L index improved to 0.707 ± 0.036. Conclusions The ongoing follow-up of this post market cohort continues to demonstrate that restorative neurostimulation provides a statistically significant, clinically meaningful and durable response across pain, disability and quality-of life scores for patients suffering chronic mechanical low back pain that has been refractory to conventional management. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01985230.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

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