RESEARCH ARTICLE


Combined Anterior-Posterior Surgery Versus Posterior Surgery for Thoracolumbar Burst Fractures: A Systematic Review of the Literature



Pim P. Oprel*, Wim E Tuinebreijer, Peter Patka, Dennis den Hartog
Department of Surgery-Traumatology, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam, ‘s-Gravendijkwal 230, 3015 CE Rotterdam, The Netherlands


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© Oprel et al.; Licensee Bentham Open.

open-access license: This is an open access article licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted, non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the work is properly cited.

* Address correspondence to this author at the Department of Surgery- Traumatology, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center Rotterdam, ‘s- Gravendijkwal 230, Office H-815, 3015 CE Rotterdam, The Netherlands; Tel: +31 10 7032395; Fax +31 10 7032396; E-mail: p.oprel@erasmusmc.nl


Abstract

Study Design:

A systematic quantitative review of the literature.

Objective:

To compare combined anterior-posterior surgery versus posterior surgery for thoracolumbar fractures in order to identify better treatments.

Summary of Background Data:

Axial load of the anterior and middle column of the spine can lead to a burst fracture in the vertebral body. The management of thoracolumbar burst fractures remains controversial. The goals of operative treatment are fracture reduction, fixation and decompressing the neural canal. For this, different operative methods are developed, for instance, the posterior and the combined anterior-posterior approach. Recent systematic qualitative reviews comparing these methods are lacking.

Methods:

We conducted an electronic search of MEDLINE, EMBASE, LILACS and the Cochrane Central Register for Controlled Trials.

Results:

Five observational comparative studies and no randomized clinical trials comparing the combined anteriorposterior approach with the posterior approach were retrieved. The total enrollment of patients in these studies was 755 patients. The results were expressed as relative risk (RR) for dichotomous outcomes and weighted mean difference (WMD) for continuous outcomes with 95% confidence intervals (CI).

Conclusions:

A small significantly higher kyphotic correction and improvement of vertebral height (sagittal index) observed for the combined anterior-posterior group is cancelled out by more blood loss, longer operation time, longer hospital stay, higher costs and a possible higher intra- and postoperative complication rate requiring re-operation and the possibility of a worsened Hannover spine score. The surgeons’ choices regarding the operative approach are biased: worse cases tended to undergo the combined anterior-posterior approach.

Keywords: Systematic review, outcome, burst fracture, thoracolumbar spine, technique, surgery.



INTRODUCTION

The thoracolumbar region of the spine consists of the region extending from the eleventh thoracic vertebra to the second lumbar vertebra (T11 to L2). Trauma may lead to fractures of this part of the spine. The average annual incidence of spinal fracture is 63.6 per 100,000 [1]. Forty-six percent of these fractures are admitted to the hospital (incidence of 29 per 100,000) and 54% are seen in an ambulatory setting. Among the hospitalized patients, 60% are men. An accidental fall is the most frequent cause of injury and motor vehicle and transport injury are the second most frequent [1, 2]. In a retrospective study of 412 thoracolumbar injuries, Denis introduced a classification system based on the biomechanical concept of the three columns [3]. The anterior column is formed by the anterior longitudinal ligament, the anterior annulus fibrosus and the anterior part of the vertebral body. The middle column is formed by the posterior longitudinal ligament, the posterior annulus fibrosus and the posterior part of the vertebral body. The posterior column is formed by the posterior arch and the posterior ligamentous complex. Failure of the vertebral body under axial load can cause a burst fracture. In a burst fracture, the anterior and middle column are fractured, leading to retropulsion of a posterior vertebral body fragment in the spinal canal. This bone fragment can be the cause of neural injury. This type of fracture is unstable. In the Denis study, 59 of the 412 case were burst fractures (14%) [3]. Most burst fractures were lumbar (86%). Twenty-eight (47.5%) patients among the 59 patients presenting burst fractures had neurological deficits. Only one patient had complete paraplegia: The neurological deficits were mostly incomplete, but neurological deterioration may evolve in this condition.

Different operative methods exist with the goals of fracture reduction, fixation and decompressing the neural canal. These stabilization procedures can be divided in anterior, posterior and combined anterior-posterior instrumentation. Systematic reviews comparing exclusively posterior approaches and combined anterior-posterior approaches have not been done. A recent Cochrane review compared operative versus non-operative treatment for thoracolumbar burst fractures without neurological deficit [4]. A recent literature review examining the outcomes of the different surgical procedures for thoracic and lumbar spine did not statistically compare the different techniques, because of preoperative inequality of the patients with regard to injury severity [5]. For this reason, we wanted to perform a systematic literature review for studies describing randomized controlled trials and/or comparative studies comparing the combined anterior-posterior with the posterior instrumentation technique.

The primary objective of this review is to compare the combined anterior-posterior with the posterior instrumentation technique for thoracolumbar burst fractures in order to identify the better treatment.

MATERIALS AND METHODOLOGY

We conducted an electronic search including MEDLINE, EMBASE, LILACS and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL). We did not limit the search by language or publication date. We used the following search terms in different combinations as MeSH (Medical Subject Heading) terms and as text words: Spinal fractures, treatment outcome, surgery, controlled clinical trial, comparative study. Manual searches including reference lists of all included studies were used to identify trials that the electronic search may have failed to identify.

Two reviewers independently assessed the titles and abstracts of all reports identified by electronic and manual searches. Each report was labeled as (a) definitely exclude, (b) unsure or (c) definitely include. Full text articles of abstracts labeled as "unsure" were reassessed according to the inclusion criteria for this review. Any differences were resolved through discussion. Studies labeled as "definitely exclude" were excluded from the review, while studies labeled as "definitely include" were further assessed for methodological quality.

Two reviewers independently extracted the data for the primary and secondary outcomes and entered the data into data collection forms developed for this purpose. Discrepancies were resolved by consensus. All data were entered into Review Manager (RevMan, [Computer program. Version 5.0. Copenhagen: The Nordic Cochrane Centre, The Cochrane Collaboration, 2008]).

Two reviewers independently assessed the included studies for sources of systematic bias in trials. Differences between the two reviewers were resolved by discussion.

Dichotomous outcomes (e.g. presence/absence of pain) were reported as proportions and were directly compared (difference in proportions). We used these proportions to calculate risk ratios (RRs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). For continuous data (e.g., Cobb's angle in degrees, vertebral height), results are presented as weighted mean differences (WMD). We used Review Manager 5.0 software (RevMan 5.0, Cochrane software) for generating the figures and statistical analyses. We explored heterogeneity using the chi-squared test with significance set at a P-value less than 0.10. The quantity of heterogeneity was estimated by the I-squared statistic. Because prior statistical evidence existed for homogeneity of effect sizes, the analysis used a fixed effect model.

RESULTS

No randomized controlled trials were retrieved. Five observational studies comparing anterior-posterior with posterior surgery were included with a total enrolment of 755 patients with available follow-up (Tables 1-5). Only two studies were prospective. The full text of every study was retrieved. All studies included patients with posterior and anterior-posterior surgical approach; one study also compared the quality of life of posterior and anterior-posterior surgical approach patients with the age-adjusted norm population. Observational studies that did not compare different treatments were excluded, because they provide a low level of evidence (level IV evidence, no control group). The results were expressed as relative risk (RR) for dichotomous outcomes and weighted mean difference (WMD) for continuous outcomes with 95% confidence intervals (CI). For the following variables, data from different studies could be pooled: kyphotic correction (Cobb's angle in degrees), loss of kyphotic correction, percentage of patients with no or minimal pain at follow-up, height loss of vertebral body (sagittal index) at follow-up, return to previous employment and deep wound infection. The percentages of dichotomous outcomes were pooled with the Mantel-Haenszel statistical method and for continuous data, inverse variance statistical analysis was used. For this pooling, the fixed effects model was used since we assumed that all variation between the studies was caused by chance and that the studies measured the same overall effect. Even if a random-effects model was used, our conclusions remained the same. Data from the studies that used different outcome measures could not be pooled due to clinical and methodological heterogeneity, and thus are described individually.

Table 1.

Characteristics of the Study of Been et al. [8]


Methods Retrospective Observational Study.
Participants 54 thoracolumbar burst fractures, follow-up data from N=46 (85%), time period May 1986 - October 1993, >50% narrowing spinal canal on CT, operation <30 days of injury. CT-scan.
Interventions Group I: Anterior decompression/stabilization with iliac bone graft + posterior stabilization: N=27. Group II: Posterior distraction instrumentation and stabilization wit AO internal fixator: N=19. Brace for 3 months. Significantly more severe other traumatic injuries (58% versus 22%, P<.005) and significantly less fracture level at thoracolumbar junction in group I (group I 70% T12-L1 versus 32% in group II, P<.01), caused by selection criteria for operation.
Outcomes Loss of reduction >50: group I N=2 (7%) versus group II N=13 (68%), P=.0013. At late follow-up demonstrated no difference in kyphotic deformity, because of over correction in group II. Kyphotic angle: group I early postoperative mean 1.20 (SD=5.50) versus group II mean -4.10 (SD=9.90); group I late follow-up mean 3.30 (SD=7.70) versus group II mean 4.10 (SD=12.40). No difference in pain: group I 23/27 no pain (85%), group II 15/19 no pain (68%). Infection in one case in both groups leading to posterior device removal. Bony union was 100% in both groups.
Notes Selection bias: Type of operation dependent on availability of instrumentation and presence of other severe organ injuries. Before 1988, all patients received the combined approach. After 1998, patients with multiple injuries received the posterior approach unless there was major compression to the spinal canal by bone fragments + neurological impairment. No significant differences between groups for age, sex, cause of injury or fracture classification (Denis).
Table 2.

Characteristics of the Study of Briem et al. [9]


Methods Prospective Study, Patients Matched for Sex, Age and Radiological Patterns of Injury.
Participants 20 consecutive patients with single level traumatic burst fracture of the thoracolumbar transition (Th12-L2), time period 1995-2000. Follow-up posterior group 47.5 months (Standard error of the mean=SEM=9.2), combined group 29.7 months (SEM=2.7). Average age of the combined group was 49.6 years (SEM=3.6) versus mean age 47.3 years (SEM=3.5) for posterior stabilization. Groups were matched for age, sex and radiological pattern of injury.
Interventions N=10, combined procedure: primary dorsal stabilization with fixateur interne + ventral fusion with autologous bone graft versus N=10 posterior stabilization with bi-segmental fixateur interne, no bone graft.
Outcomes SF-36 quality of life questionnaire, no difference between combined and posterior groups. Both groups exhibited a reduced quality of life (physical health) compared to age-referred normal population. Both groups postoperative significant reduction of Cobb’s angle. During follow-up non-significant loss of reduction between groups (combined mean Cobb angle 2.80, SEM=1.00 versus posterior mean 2.10, SEM=1.60 ). Posterior group significant height loss vertebral body (saggital index) at 4 years (mean height .88, SEM=.02 postoperative versus mean .77, SEM=.03 at 4 years, P=.001). Combined group no significant height loss at 2 years (mean height .85, SEM=.02 postoperative versus mean .82, SEM=.02 at 2 years, P>.05).
Notes No significant correlation between SF-36 and age, loss of correction, Cobb angle and saggital index.
Table 3.

Characteristics of the Study of Danisa et al. [6]


Participants 49 thoracolumbar burst fractures, incompletely paraplegic or neurologically normal plus one or more:1) > 50% loss of vertebral height measured on lateral radiograph, 2) > 200 kyphosis measured on lateral radiograph, 3) > 40% canal encroachment seen on CT. Period: 1-1-1990 until 1-12-1993. Average follow-up 27 months (range 6-54 months).
Interventions Anterior (N=16) decompression of spinal canal and autograft or posterior (N=27) or combined anterior-posterior approach (N=6). The choice of surgical procedure was determined by attending physician.
Outcomes Mean operation time: anterior group 438 minutes (SD=60), posterior group 219 minutes (SD=61), anterior-posterior group 569 minutes (S=121), P<.0003. Mean volume blood loss: anterior group 1878 cc (SD=777), posterior group 1103 cc (SD=793), anterior-posterior group 2541 cc (SD=1439), anterior + anterior-posterior group differed from posterior group, P<.008. Transfusion anterior group mean 4.6 units packed red cells (SD=2.7), posterior group mean 2.3 units (SD=2.7), anterior-posterior group 4.3 units (SD=3.6), anterior group differed from posterior group, P=.01. Mean duration postoperative stay: anterior 13 days (SD=4.5), posterior 10 days (SD=6.1), anterior-posterior group 22 days (SD=7.0), the anterior-posterior group differed from posterior and anterior group, P<.003. Total charges hospitalization and physician fees anterior group $63.963 (SD= $18.203), posterior $45.306 (SD=$15.808), anterior-posterior group $111.750 (SD=$20.635). All group different, P=.0012). Kyphotic deformities preoperative, immediately postoperative, final follow-up: anterior group 16.10 (SD=8.10), 6.10 (SD=5.30), 9.80 (SD=9.80), posterior group 15.20 (SD=8.30), 6.50 (SD=5.90), 9.50 (SD=6.80), anterior-posterior group 26.00 (SD=19.20), 12.00 (SD=11.00), 18.50 (SD=17.00), not statistically different. Frankel grade preoperatively and final follow-up: anterior: C-D-E: 2-6-8, 1-5-10; posterior: C-D-E: 8-3-16, 2-5-20; anterior-posterior: C-D-E: 2-1-3, 1-0-5, not statistically different. Denis pain scale: no or minimal pain (P1+P2): anterior 67%, posterior 35%, anterior-posterior 40%, not statistically different. Denis work scale: return to previous work (heavy labor) or to previous sedentary work or heavy labor with restrictions (W1+W2): 67% anterior, 60% posterior, 60% anterior-posterior, not statistically different. In posterior group, two deep wound infections.
Notes Only 6 patients treated by combined anterior-posterior approach with an average of 9.5 days between procedures. Groups were similar for age, gender, level of injury, % of canal compromise, neurological function and kyphosis preoperatively. Retrospective study, no RCT. The choice of surgical procedure was determined by attending physician.
Table 4.

Characteristics of the Study of Knop et al. [7, 10]


Methods Prospective Multicenter Study, 18 Centers
Participants 682 patients with acute fractures/dislocations thoracolumbar spine (T10-L2), 436 male (63.9%), 246 female (36.1%), mean age 39.5 years (range 7-83). Period September 1994 until December 1996. 144 Patients (21.1%) neurological deficit. In combined versus posterior group, significantly more fracture type C + less fracture type A. In combined versus posterior group, more incomplete neurological deficit and fewer patients without neurological deficit, no difference for complete paraplegia. No difference for associated injuries and polytrauma.
Follow-up of outpatients: N=372 (80%), mean 27 months (min. 4, max. 61 months). At follow-up: in combined versus posterior group significant more fracture type C + less fracture type A. In combined versus posterior group no difference for incomplete neurological deficit, for no neurological deficit and for complete paraplegia. Patients at follow-up with preoperative neurological deficit: posterior group 16%, anterior-posterior group 23% (P=.14). No difference for associated injuries and polytrauma.
Interventions 448 posterior (65.7%), anterior-posterior 197 (28.9%), 37 anterior (5.4%) approach. Anterior-posterior: 75 (38.1%) one-stage, 122 (61.9%) two-stage procedure.
Late follow-up: 219 posterior patients and 132 combined group patients.
Outcomes Mean operation time: anterior group 218 minutes (range 108-520), posterior group 134 minutes (range 30-390), anterior-posterior group 254 minutes (range 80-562), all three different P<.001. Mean volume blood loss: anterior group 876 cc (range 200-5500), posterior group 828 cc (range 0-8000), anterior-posterior group 1387 cc (range 200-8800), anterior-posterior group differed from posterior (P<.001) and anterior group (P<.05). One stage versus two-stage procedure in anterior-posterior approach less blood loss (mean 1019 cc versus 1635 cc) and less operation time (mean 203 versus 287 minutes) for one stage. Total complications: anterior group 29.7%, posterior 14.1%, anterior-posterior 13.7%, anterior higher, P<.05. Complications leading to revision surgery: anterior group 10.8%, posterior 4.7%, anterior-posterior 8.1%, anterior higher, non-significant differences. Kyphotic deformities preoperative + immediately postoperative: anterior group 14.80 (SD=10.40), 4.90 (SD=9.30), posterior group 15.40 (SD=8.00), 5.00 (SD=7.00), anterior-posterior group 16.80 (SD=7.90), 3.00 (SD=7.50). Kyphotic reduction preoperative versus immediately postoperative: anterior group 9.20 (SD=6.90), posterior group 10.40 (SD=7.90), anterior-posterior group 13.80 (SD=8.70). Postoperative kyphotic deformity statistically smaller for anterior-posterior versus posterior, kyphotic reduction significantly larger for anterior-posterior group versus posterior and anterior group.
Correction vertebral height (saggital index) posterior .20 (SD=.16), anterior-posterior .30 (SD=.42), difference is statistically significant.
Hannover spine score: pre-, postoperative, at follow-up: posterior group 93.3 (SD=10.9), 67.4 (SD=20.9), 69.9 (SD=22.2); anterior-posterior group 94.0 (SD=11.1), 63.1 (SD=21.6), 65.1 (SD=22.5). At follow-up, posterior group significantly better than anterior-posterior group. Difference between preoperative and at follow-up significantly higher for anterior-posterior group than for posterior group, this difference confounded by neurological deficit.
Kyphotic deformity: preoperative + at follow-up: anterior group 13.50 (SD=9.80), 8.60 (SD=9.70), posterior group 14.90 (SD=8.20), 13.10 (SD=8.30), anterior-posterior group 16.10 (SD=7.90), 9.80 (SD=9.20). Kyphotic reduction preoperative versus at follow-up: anterior group 4.90 (SD=9.20), posterior group 1.90 (SD=8.60), anterior-posterior group 5.80 (SD=10.10). Postoperative kyphotic deformity statistically smaller for anterior-posterior versus posterior. Kyphotic reduction significantly larger than anterior-posterior group versus posterior group.
Correction for vertebral height (saggital index) between preoperative and follow-up: posterior .13 (SD=.19), anterior-posterior .19 (SD=.20), difference is statistically significant.
Notes No SD given for operation time and blood loss.
Table 5.

Characteristics of the Schnee et al. Study [11]


Methods Retrospective Observational Study
Participants 25 (18 male, 7 female) patients, time period: 1993-1995, mean age 34.4 years (range 14-59 years), associated injuries n=21, mean interval injury-operation 4.7 days (range 1-27 days). Clinical follow-up 16.3 months (range 7-29.3), radiographic follow-up 8.8 months (range 3-19).
Interventions N=14 anterior: indication >= 40% ventral canal compromise, >= 40% loss of body height and/or >= 150 kyphosis, if no neurological deficit present or presence of complete motor deficit no influence on indications for ventral approach, N=9 combined anterior-posterior (one procedure): indications for anterior + multilevel corpectomies or posterior column injury unstable and N=2 posterior approach: indication < 40% ventral canal compromise, no unstable neurological deficit or deformity.
Outcomes Neurological outcome: Benzel-Larson grade, Frankel grade, Prolo economic and functional (pain) rating scale. The different approaches were not compared statistically. Kyphotic deformities preoperative, immediately postoperative: anterior group 16.80 (0-45), 2.90 (0-10), posterior group 7.50 (5-10), 100 (0-20), anterior-posterior group 18.30 (5-35), 1.00 (0-5). Pain: posterior occasional 0/2 (0%), daily 2/2 (100%); combined group occasional 8/9 (89%), daily 1/9 (11%). Seven of 9 patients of combined group and 2 of 2 patients of posterior group at follow-up returned to prior employment. Frankel grade preoperatively and final follow-up: anterior: B-C-D-E: 2-2-4-6, 1-1-4-8; posterior: B-C-D-E: 0-0-1-1, 0-0-0-2; anterior-posterior: B-C-D-E: 2-3-3-1, 0-2-5-2. One deep wound infection in anterior-posterior group.
Notes Operative approach dependent on vertebral body height, canal compromise and kyphosis. From Prolo outcome scale, only mean and no SD provided. From kyphotic deformity, only mean and range given without SD.

Anterior-Posterior Surgery Versus Posterior Surgery

Two studies were pooled for the postoperative outcome measure kyphotic correction (Cobb's angle in degrees) (Comparison 1.1: two studies; 678 participants; WMD 3.42, 95% CI 2.02 to 4.83; P<.00001) [6, 7]. The contributing weight of the large study of Knop et al. was high (98.7%). The postoperative kyphotic correction was significantly higher in the combined anterior-posterior group (Fig. 1).

Fig. (1).

Forest plot comparing anterior-posterior surgery versus posterior surgery for the outcome kyphotic correction (Cobb's angle in degrees).


Four studies were pooled for loss of kyphotic correction (Cobb's angle in degrees) (Comparison 1.2: four studies; 450 participants; WMD 0.27, 95% CI -1.11 to 1.64; P=.70) [6, 8-10]. The contributing weight of the large study of Knop et al. was high (77.9%). The loss of kyphotic correction was not significantly different between the two approaches (Fig. 2).

Fig. (2).

Forest plot comparing anterior-posterior surgery versus posterior surgery for the outcome loss of kyphotic correction (Cobb's angle in degrees) during follow-up.


Three studies were pooled for the percentage of patients with no or minimal pain at follow-up (Comparison 1.3: three studies; 90 participants; RR 1.21, 95% CI 0.87 to 1.69; P=0.26) [6, 8, 11]. The percentage of patients with no or minimal pain at follow-up was not significantly different between the two approaches (Fig. 3).

Fig. (3).

Forest plot comparing anterior-posterior surgery versus posterior surgery for the outcome percentage of patients with no or minimal pain at follow-up.


The postoperative improvement of the vertebral height (saggital index) was only retrieved from one study (Comparison 1.4: One study; 645 participants; WMD 0.10, 95% CI 0.04 to 0.16; P=.001) [7]. The postoperative improvement of the vertebral height (saggital index) was significantly higher in the combined anterior-posterior group.

Two studies were pooled for height loss of the vertebral body (saggital index) between direct postoperative and final follow-up (Comparison 1.5: two studies; 371 participants; WMD -0.01, 95% CI -0.03 to 0.02; P=.69) [9, 10]. The contributing weight of the large study by Knop et al. was high (83.1%). The height loss of the vertebral body (saggital index) between direct postoperative and final follow-up was not significantly different between the two approaches (Fig. 4).

Fig. (4).

Forest plot comparing anterior-posterior surgery versus posterior surgery for the outcome height loss vertebral body (saggital index) between postoperative and final follow-up.


The operative time in minutes was only retrieved from one study (Comparison 1.6: one study; 33 participants; WMD 350.0, 95% CI 250.49 to 449.51; P<.00001) [6]. The operative time in minutes was significantly longer in the combined anterior-posterior group.

The mean volume blood loss in cc was only retrieved from one study (Comparison 1.7: one study; 33 participants; WMD 1438.0, 95% CI 248.36 to 2627.64; P=.02) [6]. The mean volume blood loss in cc was significantly higher in the combined anterior-posterior group.

The postoperative hospital stay in days was only retrieved from one study (Comparison 1.8: one study; 33 participants; WMD 12.0, 95% CI 5.94 to 18.06; P=.0001) [6]. The postoperative hospital stay in days was significantly longer in the combined anterior-posterior group.

The total charge of the hospitalization and physician visits in dollars was only retrieved from one study (Comparison 1.9: one study; 33 participants; WMD 66444.0, 95% CI 48889.19 to 83998.81 ; P<.00001) [6]. The total charge of the hospitalization and physician visits in dollars was significantly higher in the combined anterior-posterior group.

Return to previous employment (heavy labor or sedentary) was retrieved from two studies and data were pooled (Comparison 1.10: two studies; 44 participants; RR 1.04, 95% CI 0.65 to 1.65; P=0.88) [6, 11]. Return to previous employment (heavy labor or sedentary) was not significantly different between the two approaches (Fig. 5).

Fig. (5).

Forest plot comparing anterior-posterior surgery versus posterior surgery for the outcome return to previous employment (heavy labour or sedentary).


Three studies were pooled for the outcome: Deep wound infection (Comparison 1.11: three studies; 90 participants; RR 0.79, 95% CI 0.15 to 4.09; P=0.78) [6, 8, 11]. The outcome deep wound infection was not significantly different between the two approaches (Fig. 6).

Fig. (6).

Forest plot comparing anterior-posterior surgery versus posterior surgery for the outcome deep wound infection.


The outcome, intra- and postoperative complications needing reoperations, was only retrieved from one study (Comparison 1.12: one study; 645 participants; RR 1.73, 95% CI 0.92 to 3.25; P=0.09) [7]. For the outcome, intra- and postoperative complications needing reoperations, more complications needing reoperation in the combined anterior-posterior group.

The outcome, intra- and postoperative complications not needing reoperations, was only retrieved from one study (Comparison 1.13: one study; 645 participants; RR 0.60, 95% CI 0.31 to 1.13; P=0.11) [7]. The outcome, intra- and postoperative complications not needing reoperations, was not significantly different between the two approaches.

The outcome Hannover spine score was only retrieved from one study (Comparison 1.14: one study; 342 participants; WMD -4.80, 95% CI -9.70 to 0.10; P=.05) [10]. For the outcome, Hannover spine score, worse scores were observed in the combined anterior-posterior group.

The different domains of the quality of life (SF-36) questionnaire were only retrieved from one study with 20 participants [9]. The following domains were examined: physical functioning (Comparison 1.15: WMD 8.52, 95% CI -12.44 to 29.48; P=.43), physical role limitations (Comparison 1.16: WMD -1.22, 95% CI -35.43 to 32.99; P=.94), body pain (Comparison 1.17: WMD -7.80, 95% CI -30.04 to 14.44; P=.69), general health perceptions (Comparison 1.18: WMD 0.30, 95% CI -14.08 to 14.68; P=.97), vitality (Comparison 1.19: WMD -4.10, 95% CI -22.34 to 14.14; P=.44), social functioning (Comparison 1.20: WMD -3.50, 95% CI -22.14 to 15.14; P=.71), emotional role limitations (Comparison 1.21: WMD -5.57, 95% CI -37.50 to 26.36; P=.73), and mental health (Comparison 1.22: WMD 1.40, 95% CI -13.08 to 15.88; P=.85). There were no significant differences between the two approaches.

Anterior-Posterior Surgery Versus Age-Referenced Controls (Norm Population)

The different domains of the quality of life (SF-36) questionnaire were only retrieved from one study with ten participants [9]. For the domain, physical functioning (Comparison 2.1: WMD -11.45, 95% CI -24.76 to 1.86; P=.09), worse scores were observed in the combined anterior-posterior group as compared to the norm population. The domain, physical role limitations (Comparison 2.2: WMD -31.49, 95% CI -60.06 to -2.92; P=.03), was significantly different in the combined anterior-posterior group versus the norm population. The domains body pain (Comparison 2.3: WMD -18.20, 95% CI -42.52 to 6.12; P=.14), general health perceptions (Comparison 2.4: WMD 4.10, 95% CI -11.78 to 19.98; P=.61), vitality (Comparison 2.5: WMD -7.43, 95% CI -21.69 to 6.83; P=.31), social functioning (Comparison 2.6: WMD -9.91, 95% CI -26.11 to 6.29; P=.23), emotional role limitations (Comparison 2.7: WMD -16.64, 95% CI -44.01 to 10.73; P=.23), and mental health (Comparison 2.8: WMD 2.94, 95% CI -9.64 to 15.52; P=.65) were all not significantly different from the norm population.

Posterior Surgery Versus Age-Referenced Controls (Norm Population)

The different domains of the quality of life (SF-36) questionnaire were only retrieved from one study with ten participants [9]. For the domains, physical functioning (Comparison 3.1: WMD -19.97, 95% CI -42.34 to 2.40; P=.08) and physical role limitations (Comparison 3.2: WMD -30.27, 95% CI -60.97 to 0.43; P=.05), worse scores were observed in the posterior group as compared to the norm population. The domains of body pain (Comparison 3.3: WMD -10.40, 95% CI -32.93 to 12.13; P=.37), general health perceptions (Comparison 3.4: WMD 3.80, 95% CI -11.31 to 18.91; P=.62), vitality (Comparison 3.5: WMD -3.33, 95% CI -21.72 to 15.06; P=.72), social functioning (Comparison 3.6: WMD -6.41, 95% CI -24.17 to 11.35; P=.48), emotional role limitations (Comparison 3.7: WMD -11.07, 95% CI -36.91 to 14.77; P=.40), and mental health (Comparison 3.8: WMD 1.54, 95% CI -13.85 to 16.93; P=.84) were all not significantly different from the norm population.

Anterior-Posterior Surgery Versus Posterior Surgery Using Data from Another Systematic Review [5]

In the systematic review by Verlaan et al. the pooled data were not statistically analysed [5]. These authors distinguished four posterior surgery groups: posterior short-segment instrumentation, posterior long-segment instrumentation, posterior short- or long-segment instrumentation and combined anterior and posterior technique. Because of our objective, comparing the posterior technique with the combined approach, we compared the posterior short-segment instrumentation with the combined anterior and posterior technique in Verlaan’s review. Verlaan’s combined group also includes the data from 27 patients in the Been et al. group, which we also used [8]. Because Verlaan et al. stated that the different groups were not comparable for the preoperative Cobb's angle, we compared this angle between the combined and posterior approach [5]. A significant higher preoperative Cobb's angle in degrees was found in the combined group (Comparison 4.1: one review; 1281 participants; WMD 3.70, 95% CI 2.20 to 5.20; P<.00001). The postoperative kyphotic correction was significantly higher in the combined anterior-posterior group (Comparison 4.2: one review; 1281 participants; WMD 3.00, 95% CI 1.88 to 4.12; P<.00001). This difference is probably clinically not important. The percentage of patients with no or minimal pain at follow-up was not significantly different between the two group (91% versus 84%) (Comparison 4.3: one review; 387 participants; RR 1.08, 95% CI 0.96 to 1.22; P=.21). The percentage of miscellaneous complications did not differ between the two approaches (4.6% versus 2.9%) (Comparison 4.4: one review; 1659 participants; RR 1.59, 95% CI 0.73 to 3.47; P=.24).

DISCUSSION

This review includes data from five observational comparative studies, but only two studies were prospective. One multicenter study included 682 patients, of which 351 had long follow-up and so were available for our objectives. Because of this large population, the study had great influence on data analysis [7, 10]. The other included studies had small sample sizes.

The postoperative kyphotic correction and postoperative improvement of vertebral height (saggital index) were significantly higher in the combined anterior-posterior group. The loss of this kyphotic correction and the height loss of the vertebral body (saggital index) during follow-up did not differ significantly between the two approaches. The weighted mean difference of kyphotic correction (3.420) and the WMD of the height improvement (.10) are clinically unimportant. This improved kyphotic correction is not expected to be found in the current two-staged combined approach. In this technique, the kyphotic angle is first corrected during the posterior approach. During the second stage by anterior approach, the objective is only spinal fusion and not kyphotic correction. The percentage of patients with no or minimal pain at follow-up was not significantly different between the two approaches. Mean volume blood loss and total hospitalization and physician charges were significantly higher in the combined anterior-posterior group. Operative time and postoperative hospital stay were significantly longer in the combined anterior-posterior group. When thoracoscopically-assisted anterior fusion techniques are more commonly used, changes may occur in the outcomes mentioned above.

No significant differences were found for return to previous employment or for deep wound infections. A trend was found for more intra- and postoperative complications needing reoperations in the combined anterior-posterior group. No significant differences were found for intra- and postoperative complications not needing reoperations. A trend was found for worse Hannover spine score in the combined anterior-posterior group. The quality of life (SF-36) domain scores were not significantly different between the two approaches. In addition, no differences were found for the two surgical approaches for the quality of life (SF-36) domain scores as compared with the norm population.

Our conclusion is that a small significant increase (probably not clinically important) in kyphotic correction and improvement of vertebral height (saggital index) for the combined anterior-posterior group is cancelled out by more blood loss, longer operation time, longer hospital stay, higher costs and a possible higher intra- and postoperative complication rate needing reoperations, as well as a potentially worse Hannover spine score.

Are the included observational studies biased by patient selection? In the multicenter study of Knop et al. only one operation technique was performed in a clinic [7, 10]. Is it possible that certain type of acute spinal fracture patients are referred to a special clinic or does every clinic get the same type of patients? The combined anterior-posterior group had significantly more preoperative neurological deficits and more type C fractures than the posterior group in this multicenter study. The patients with long follow-up had no differences in preoperative neurological deficit, but more type C fractures. In the study of Been et al. no significant differences existed for age, sex, cause of injury or fracture classification, but there were more patients with other severe traumatic injuries and less patients with fractures at the level of the thoracolumbar junction in the combined group [8]. In the study of Briem et al. the patients were matched for sex, age and radiological pattern of injury [9]. In the Danisa et al. study, the groups were similar for age, gender, level of injury, % of canal compromise, neurological function and kyphosis preoperatively, but the sample size of the combined group was only six [6]. The Schnee et al. study only had a sample size of two for the posterior approach [11]. In this study, the operative approach was dependent on vertebral body height, canal compromise and kyphosis. In summary, the selection for the operation technique is biased; worse neurological and structural cases had a greater chance to undergo a combined anterior-posterior approach. Patients are selected for the anterior approach because of neurological reasons. With this approach, the spinal canal is cleared of bone fragments. However, a review article found no evidence for neurological improvement after spinal canal clearance [12]. A progressive neurological deficit still represents an indication for surgical decompression of the spinal canal. The Load Sharing Classification [13], which was developed to classify thoracolumbar fracture severity, can be used to select patients for a specific treatment for structural reasons. The different options for selection can be conservative versus operative treatment [14]; anterior versus posterior surgery [15]; anterior versus anterior-posterior combined approach [16]. The anterior approach will then be used for more comminuted fractures. The Load Sharing Classification has good intra- and inter-observer reliability [17], but has still to be validated in RCTs.

In a systematic review about the management of unstable traumatic thoracolumbar fractures without neurological deficit, the authors could not make any conclusions regarding the effectiveness of a particular kind of treatment because of the poor methodological quality of the studies [18]. Comments on this review suggested the inclusion of non-comparative observational studies [19]. In the latest edition of the Cochrane handbook, the authors stated that it may be justified to include non-randomized studies [20]. Verlaan et al. included retrospective and prospective case-series in their systematic review, but they did not pool and statistically analyze their data because they concluded the data were too heterogeneous [5]. Analyzing their data, we found no discrepancies with our results.

It is important to emphasize that the quality of the evidence is low because of the lack of RCTs, because the observational studies used could be biased by selection, and because most studies had a small sample size, leading to a lack of power.

It is a good tradition to end a review by asking to initiate high quality RCTs for comparing the different treatment modalities. However, surgical technique for the treatment of spinal fractures is rapidly evolving; operations are more often performed with the use of a thoracoscope and surgeons often try newly developed operation techniques before comparing them in RCTs with older techniques.

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