Summary

Eligibility
for people ages 18 years and up (full criteria)
Location
at UCSF
Dates
study start
estimated completion
Principal Investigator
by Lee Tan (ucsf)
Headshot of Lee Tan
Lee Tan

Description

Summary

Prospective, Multicenter, Case-Control Analysis of the VersaTie Posterior Fixation System to Prevent Proximal Junctional Failure in Long Posterior Spinal Fusion Constructs for Adult Patients

Details

Specific Aims:

  • Evaluate the safety and performance of posterior spinal fusion constructs supplemented with posterior spinolaminar fixation using the VersaTie System compared to posterior fixation constructs without VersaTie System supplementation in adult patients undergoing long posterior spinal fusion by evaluating intraoperative and postoperative complications, clinical and radiographic outcomes, patient-reported outcomes (PROs) and need for revision surgery.
  • Evaluate surgical treatment outcomes and identify best practice guidelines for complex adult spinal deformity (ASD) patients, including radiographic and clinical outcomes, surgical and postoperative complications, risk factors for and revision surgery.
  • Develop and validate a standardized, universal complications classification system for spine surgery
  • Evaluate perioperative blood management approaches, transfusion requirements, including variance in thresholds for blood transfusion and associated complications for adult spinal deformity surgery
  • Assess impact of opioid use and pain management on patient cost, complications and outcomes
  • Evaluate optimal opioid and analgesic usage and protocols for standard work development
  • Evaluate clinical outcomes utilizing legacy patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) including modified Oswestry Disability Index (mODI), Scoliosis Research Society Questionnaire 22r (SRS-22r), Veterans RAND-12 (VR-12), and numeric pain rating scale (NRS) and compare the results of these legacy PROMs to outcomes scores as measured by the NIH Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) - PROMIS Anxiety, Depression, Pain Interference, Physical Function, and Social Satisfaction. Secondary aims for PROM research for this study include
    1. Validation of the PROMIS tool for ASD
    2. Establish a core set of PROMs for best practice guidelines for ASD
    3. Evaluate patient reported outcome variance for ASD according to SRS-Schwab spine deformity type including variance in baseline PROM domains impacted and variance in improvement in PROM domains
    4. Evaluate ASD outcomes compared to population norms and investigate/develop appropriate measures of clinically significant improvement
  • Evaluate clinical outcomes stratifying by patient chronological and physiological age
  • Evaluate measures to quantify patient physiological age including patient frailty for ASD and validate a frailty measurement system for ASD
  • Evaluate the role of functional tests in patient's baseline frailty assessment including hand manometer and Edmonton Frail Scale. See appendix, pages 17 & 18 for details.
  • Evaluate the contribution of patient frailty to patient outcomes, complications, cost of care, disability, and complications
  • Evaluate if patient frailty is a static measure or if frailty is a dynamic measure that can be improved through "pre-habilitation" and if the according associations with reductions in frailty correlate with reductions of cost, complications, and improvement in outcomes
  • Evaluate cost variance for ASD surgery according to patient, institution, and geographical region and evaluate the cost effectiveness of surgical intervention for ASD
  • Evaluate incidence of and risk factors for mental health (MH) compromise among ASD patients and establish best practice guidelines for assessing MH for ASD patients
  • Evaluate the association of MH with surgical complications, outcomes, hospital length of stay and cost for ASD surgery
  • Evaluate the association of social health surgical complications, outcomes, hospital length of stay and cost for ASD surgery and risk factors for routine (home) discharge vs. skilled nursing facility (SNF)/rehabilitation facility
  • Broaden the evaluation of the surgically treated ASD patient to maximize evaluation of the entirety of the episode of care to include steps that can be taken prior to surgery including "prehabilitation," pain management, and MH care to improve treatment outcomes, reduce cost, reduce hospital length of stay, reduce non-routing discharge and reduce early and late complications
  • Establish a core set of standard work guidelines to clinically and radiographically evaluate and treat ASD patients and evaluate the utility of standard work to improve outcomes for ASD and formulate best practice guidelines for surgical treatment of ASD
  • Develop predictive analytic algorithms to risk stratify for best/worst outcomes, complications, sentinel events, and economic loss for ASD surgery
  • Evaluate the prevalence and incidence of sacroiliac pain before/after complex adult spinal deformity surgery.

Keywords

Adult Spinal Deformity, Scoliosis, Kyphosis, Sagittal Imbalance, Index or revision spine surgery for complex adult spinal deformity

Eligibility

You can join if…

Open to people ages 18 years and up

  1. >18 years of age at the time of treatment
  2. EOS full body or standing 36" AP & Lateral images of entire spine
  3. Posterior spine fusion with pedicle screw fixation construct of 5 or more levels
  4. Pedicle screw fixation to be supplemented proximally with NuVasive VersaTie system
  5. Upper instrumented vertebra (UIV) terminating at a newly instrumented level
  6. Lowest instrumented vertebra (LIV) sacrum/pelvis
  7. Surgery scheduled to take place in the next 6 months

You CAN'T join if...

  1. Active spine tumor or infection
  2. Deformity due to acute trauma
  3. Prisoners
  4. Women who are pregnant
  5. Patient is unwilling or unable to complete questionnaires

Locations

  • University of California - San Francisco accepting new patients
    San Francisco California 94143 United States
  • Shiley Center for Orthopaedic Research and Education at Scripps Clinic accepting new patients
    La Jolla California 92037 United States

Lead Scientist at University of California Health

  • Lee Tan (ucsf)
    Dr. Lee Tan specializes in both minimally invasive and traditional open surgical techniques for the treatment of various spinal disorders.

Details

Status
accepting new patients
Start Date
Completion Date
(estimated)
Sponsor
International Spine Study Group Foundation
ID
NCT04888104
Study Type
Observational
Participants
Expecting 225 study participants
Last Updated