Spine
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: This publication focuses on proceedings from the First Annual Lumbar Total Disc Replacement Summit, held October 25, 2016 in Boston, MA. The Summit brought together 17 thought leading surgeons who employed a modified-Delphi method to determine where consensus existed pertaining to the utilization of lumbar total disc replacement as a standard of care for a subpopulation of patients suffering from degenerative disc disease.
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: Lumbar total disc replacement, now in use since 2004, was determined by the panel to be a standard of care for the treatment of symptomatic single-level lumbar degenerative disc disease in the active patient subpopulation as outlined by the investigational device exemption study criteria. The large body of evidence supporting this statement, including surgeons' experiences, was presented and discussed. Consensus statements focusing on decision-making criteria reflected that efficacy, long-term safety, clinical outcomes with validated measures, and cost-effectiveness should form the basis of decision-making by payers. Diagnostic challenges with lumbar degenerative disc disease patients were discussed among the panel, and it was concluded that although variably used among surgeons, reliable tools exist to appropriately diagnose discogenic back pain.
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: Long-term data are now available to support the safety and efficacy of lumbar total disc replacement (TDR). Five-year randomized and controlled trials, meta-analyses, and observational studies support a similar or lower risk of complications with lumbar TDR compared with fusion. ⋯ Survey results of surgeon practice experiences supported the evidence, revealing a low rate of complications with TDR. Panelists acknowledged the importance of adhering to selection criteria to help minimize patient complications.
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: Consensus statements regarding the evidence-base for lumbar total disc replacement, as it pertains to payer decision-making, were developed through a modified-Delphi technique involving 17 spine surgeons and a former payer medical director. The Delphi process involved one round of anonymous survey and one round with a face-to-face meeting. The survey was a 51-item, electronically administered questionnaire to determine level of agreement with proposed statements on the evidence for lumbar total disc replacement and to provide additional diagnosis and management practice information for further deliberations. ⋯ The voting processes during meeting deliberations remained anonymous. Consensus was defined as ≥ 90% agreement. Consensus was reached on 11 statements, divided into themes that focused on patient eligibility and diagnosis, evidence criteria for coverage decisions, clinical evidence, and budgetary implications.
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Comparative Study
Anterior versus Posterior Thoracic Discectomy-A Systematic Review.
Systematic literature review. ⋯ 4.