Affiliation:
1. Pain Management Center of Paducah, Paducah, KY, and University of Louisville, Louisville, KY
Abstract
Background: The therapeutic spinal facet joint interventions generally used for the treatment of
axial spinal pain of facet joint origin are intraarticular facet joint injections, facet joint nerve blocks,
and radiofrequency neurotomy. Despite interventional procedures being common as treatment
strategies for facet joint pathology, there is a paucity of literature investigating these therapeutic
approaches.
Systematic reviews assessing the effectiveness of various therapeutic facet joint interventions have
shown there to be variable evidence based on the region and the modality of treatment utilized.
Overall, the evidence ranges from limited to moderate.
Objective: To evaluate and update the clinical utility of therapeutic lumbar, cervical, and thoracic
facet joint interventions in managing chronic spinal pain.
Study Design: A systematic review of therapeutic lumbar, cervical, and thoracic facet joint
interventions for the treatment of chronic spinal pain.
Methods: The available literature on lumbar, cervical, and thoracic facet joint interventions in
managing chronic spinal pain was reviewed. The quality assessment criteria utilized were the
Cochrane Musculoskeletal Review Group criteria and Interventional Pain Management Techniques
– Quality Appraisal of Reliability and Risk of Bias Assessment (IPM – QRB) for randomized trials
and Interventional Pain Management Techniques – Quality Appraisal of Reliability and Risk of Bias
Assessment for Nonrandomized Studies (IPM – QRBNR) for observational studies.
The level of evidence was classified at 5 levels from Level I to Level V.
Data sources included relevant literature identified through searches on PubMed and EMBASE from
1966 through March 2015, and manual searches of the bibliographies of known primary and
review articles.
Outcome Measures: The primary outcome measure was pain relief (short-term relief = up to 6
months and long-term > 6 months). Secondary outcome measures were improvement in functional
status, psychological status, return to work, and reduction in opioid intake consumption.
Results: A total of 21 randomized controlled trials meeting appropriate inclusion criteria were
assessed in this evaluation. A total of 5 observational studies were assessed.
In the lumbar spine, for long-term effectiveness, there is Level II evidence for radiofrequency
neurotomy and lumbar facet joint nerve blocks, whereas the evidence is Level III for lumbosacral
intraarticular injections.
In the cervical spine, for long-term improvement, there is Level II evidence for cervical radiofrequency
neurotomy and cervical facet joint nerve blocks, and Level IV evidence for cervical intraarticular
injections.
In the thoracic spine there is Level II evidence for thoracic facet joint nerve blocks and Level IV
evidence for radiofrequency neurotomy for long-term improvement. Limitations: The limitations of this systematic review include an overall paucity of high quality studies and more specifically the
lack of investigations related to thoracic facet joint injections.
Conclusion: Based on the present assessment for the management of spinal facet joint pain, the evidence for long-term
improvement is Level II for lumbar and cervical radiofrequency neurotomy, and therapeutic facet joint nerve blocks in the cervical,
thoracic, and lumbar spine; Level III for lumbar intraarticular injections; and Level IV for cervical intraarticular injections and thoracic
radiofrequency neurotomy.
Key Words: Spinal pain, chronic low back pain, chronic neck pain, chronic thoracic pain, intraarticular facet joint blocks, facet joint
nerve blocks, conventional radiofrequency neurotomy, pulsed radiofrequency neurolysis
Publisher
American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
Cited by
58 articles.
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