• Spine · Aug 2012

    Review

    An evidence-based medicine process to determine outcomes after cervical spine trauma: what surgeons should be telling their patients.

    • Peter Lewkonia, Christian Dipaola, Rowan Schouten, Vanessa Noonan, Marcel Dvorak, and Charles Fisher.
    • Division of Orthopaedics, Department of Surgery, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada.
    • Spine. 2012 Aug 15;37(18):E1140-7.

    Study DesignA systematic review of the available medical literature from 1980 to 2010 was conducted and combined with expert opinion from a recent survey of experts regarding cervical spine fractures. Using an objective, hierarchical approach, the best available evidence is presented for health-related quality-of-life outcomes for these injuries.ObjectiveTo provide an evidence-based set of guidelines for cervical spine injuries in order to reduce variability in the information given to patients and their families.Summary Of Background DataPatients' expectations regarding quality-of-life outcomes are highly dependent on the information provided by surgeons early in the treatment course. Our previous work has demonstrated that there is substantial variability in what surgeons tell patients regarding outcomes of cervical spine injuries, thus patients' expectations will differ and outcomes vary.MethodsFour common cervical spine injuries (C1 burst, Hangman fracture, odontoid fracture, and unilateral facet fracture) treated both surgically and nonsurgically were considered. We assessed the evidence regarding 5 health-related quality-of-life outcomes: time to return to work, activity level, hospital stay, the proportion of patients who are pain free and patients who have regained full range of motion at 1 year after the injury.ResultsPublished outcome data were available for most injuries. Using consensus expert opinion and the literature, answers to each question were achieved. Overall, expert opinion was relatively homogeneous across injury types, suggesting that experts do not distinguish between specific injuries when advising patients of expected outcomes such as pain.ConclusionBy overcoming gaps in the literature with consensus expert opinion, our study provides surgeons and others with evidence-based medicine guidelines for patient-centered outcomes after cervical spine injury. This information can be presented to patients to frame expectations of typical outcomes during and after treatment to optimize patient care and quality of life.

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