• Spine · Mar 2015

    Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study

    Superion interspinous process spacer for intermittent neurogenic claudication secondary to moderate lumbar spinal stenosis: two-year results from a randomized controlled FDA-IDE pivotal trial.

    • Vikas V Patel, Peter G Whang, Thomas R Haley, W Daniel Bradley, Pierce D Nunley, Raphael P Davis, Larry E Miller, Jon E Block, and Fred H Geisler.
    • *University of Colorado Hospital, Denver, CO †Department of Orthopaedic and Rehabilitation, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT ‡Performance Spine and Sports Physicians, P.C., Pottstown, PA §Texas Back Institute, Denton, TX ¶Spine Institute of Louisiana, Shreveport, LA ∥Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY **Miller Scientific Consulting, Inc., Asheville, NC ††The Jon Block Group, San Francisco, CA; and ‡‡McLaren Hospital, Petoskey, MI.
    • Spine. 2015 Mar 1;40(5):275-82.

    Study DesignProspective, multicenter, randomized, controlled, investigational device exemption noninferiority trial.ObjectiveTo determine 2-year outcomes in patients with intermittent neurogenic claudication secondary to moderate lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) who were treated with the Superion interspinous process spacer.Summary Of Background DataInterspinous spacers are a less-invasive treatment alternative compared with surgical decompression for patients with LSS unresponsive to conservative care. High-quality comparative data with these devices are lacking.MethodsPatients presenting with intermittent neurogenic claudication secondary to moderate LSS who failed at least 6 months of nonsurgical management were randomly allocated to treatment with the Superion spacer or a control spacer (X-Stop) and followed for 2 years.ResultsA total of 391 randomized patients were implanted with Superion (n = 190) or control (n = 201) spacers at 29 sites in the United States between August 2008 and December 2011. Implants were successfully implanted in 99.5% of patients with Superion and 99.0% of control patients. The primary composite endpoint of this study was met, which demonstrated that the Superion spacer was noninferior to the X-Stop spacer. Leg pain, the predominant patient complaint, decreased in severity by 70% during 2 years in each group. Most (77%) patients achieved leg pain clinical success (improvement ≥20 mm) at 2 years. Back pain clinical success (improvement ≥20 mm) was 68%, with no differences between groups. Oswestry Disability Index clinical success (≥15% point improvement) was achieved in 65% of patients. The rates of complications and reoperations were similar between groups.ConclusionThe Superion interspinous process spacer relieves symptoms of intermittent neurogenic claudication secondary to moderate LSS in the majority of patients through 2 years.Level Of Evidence2.

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