Can Prophylactic Foraminotomy Prevent C5 Palsy

Sponsor
The Cleveland Clinic (Other)
Overall Status
Recruiting
CT.gov ID
NCT03023696
Collaborator
University of Southern California (Other)
480
1
2
78
6.2

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

C5 palsy (C5P) is a well-known, although rare complication of cervical spine decompression surgery. In severe forms, C5P causes debilitating upper extremity weakness involving the deltoids and/or biceps brachii muscles, ultimately diminishing these patients' quality of life. Furthermore, about half of patients with C5P present with sensory deficits and/or intractable pain in addition to the muscle weakness.

Prophylactic bilateral foraminotomy at the C5 level during cervical decompression surgery has been studied recently with the hope that it will minimize the risk of developing a C5 nerve root palsy postoperatively. Although the current literature provides some support for this claim, there are insufficient data establishing this technique as a proven measure to reduce the incidence of C5P. In the present study, we seek to evaluate the effect of bilateral foraminotomy on postoperative C5P incidence rates.

Bilateral foraminotomy has been correlated with a reduced risk of developing C5P following cervical decompression surgery, but an identical foraminotomy procedure has never been applied in a randomized manner to all qualifying patients in a study. Additionally, prophylactic foraminotomy has only been prospectively studied during laminoplasty. In the proposed study, bilateral foraminotomy will be randomized to patients receiving cervical decompression surgery (laminoplasty, laminectomy, fusion). This is a multicenter randomized trial, including the following sites: Cleveland Clinic, Columbia University Medical Center, and University of Southern California Spine Center. Patients undergoing cervical decompression surgery will be consented and enrolled if they meet the inclusion and exclusion criteria. Subsequently, incidence of C5P will be monitored to determine efficacy of prophylactic C5 bilateral foraminotomy during cervical decompression.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Procedure: Bilateral Cervical Keyhole Foraminotomy
  • Procedure: Cervical Decompression
N/A

Detailed Description

Introduction:

C5 palsy (C5P) is a well-known, although rare complication of cervical spine decompression surgery.1,2 In severe forms, C5P causes debilitating upper extremity weakness involving the deltoids and/or biceps brachii muscles, ultimately diminishing these patients' quality of life.3 Furthermore, about half of patients with C5P present with sensory deficits and/or intractable pain in addition to the muscle weakness.5 Fortunately, almost all cases of C5P present unilaterally. The deficit is typically quantified and diagnosed using each patient's manual muscle test (MMT) score (rating 0-5). The American Medical Association impairment rating guide grades the MMT as follows: Grade 0 = no perceptible muscle contraction; Grade 1 = muscle contraction palpable, but no motion; Grade 2 = motion of the part only with gravity reduced; Grade 3 = muscle can hold the part in the test position against gravity alone; Grade 4 = patient can move the part through the full range of active motion against "some" resistance; Grade 5 = patient can move the part through the full active range of motion against "full" resistance. C5P is defined as: a reduction of at least 1 in deltoid and/or biceps brachii scores compared to preoperative scores, without any deterioration of myelopathic symptoms.5

Although a uniform understanding of the etiology and mechanism of C5P is not yet established, certain hypotheses have gained recognition. One prominent hypothesis, called the tethering phenomenon, suggests that following decompression, posterior shift of the cord produces traction on the nerve root resulting in a nerve root lesion. Other, less agreed upon hypotheses include: inadvertent injury to the nerve root during surgery, spinal cord ischemia, segmental spinal cord disorder, and reperfusion injury of the spinal cord. As the pathogenesis of C5P is uncovered, concerted efforts to minimize the incidence of this unfortunate complication have been undertaken.5

Prophylactic bilateral foraminotomy at the C5 level during cervical decompression surgery has been studied recently with the hope that it will minimize the risk of developing a C5 nerve root palsy postoperatively.6,7,8 Although the current literature provides some support for this claim, there are insufficient data establishing this technique as a proven measure to reduce the incidence of C5P. In the present study, we seek to evaluate the effect of bilateral foraminotomy on postoperative C5P incidence rates.

Background:

Komagata et al.7 performed a retrospective study to investigate preoperative risk factors that may cause postoperative C5P. The study included 305 cases of cervical expansive laminoplasty performed for spondylotic myelopathy or ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament. No specific risk factors were found to be associated with higher incidence of C5P. However, bilateral partial foraminotomy was found to be effective in preventing C5P, with C5P occurring in 1 gutter (0.6%) in the foraminotomy group and in 12 gutters (4.0%) in the non-foraminotomy group (p<0.05).

Interestingly, preoperative anatomical measurements have been suggested to correlate with risk of developing C5P. Lubelski et al.9 performed a retrospective study to determine whether postoperative C5P can be predicted from preoperative antero-posterior diameter (APD), foraminal diameter (FD), and/or cord-lamina angle (CLA). 98 consecutive patients who underwent either anterior or posterior decompression surgery at C4-C5 for spondylotic myelopathy were analyzed. It was found that for every 1-mm increase in APD and FD, the odds of developing palsy decrease 69% (p<0.01) and decrease 98% (p<0.01), respectively. In contrast, for every 1-degree increase in CLA, the odds of developing palsy increase by 43% (p<0.01). Furthermore, Lubelski et al. used these three preoperative parameters - APD, FD, and CLA - to create a nomogram that predicts the probability that a patient will develop C5 palsy. This nomogram will be investigated for validity in the current study.

Preliminary Studies:

In addition to the study mentioned above, several authors have demonstrated the efficacy of prophylactic C5 foraminotomy during laminoplasty to prevent postoperative C5P. Sasai et al.7 performed the first prospective study using microcervical foraminotomy (MCF) during cervical laminoplasty as a prophylactic measure to prevent C5P. MCF was used selectively in patients with EMG abnormalities (Group A), and decreased the incidence of postoperative C5P compared to a group that did not have EMG studies or MCF performed (Group B). No patients in Group A and three patients in Group B experienced postoperative C5P (0% vs. 8.1%; p=0.035). No adverse outcomes were reported in this study. Based on these results, the authors suggested preexisting subclinical C5 root compression as a cause of C5P after posterior cervical decompression for myelopathy.

In 2012, Katsumi et al.5 performed a prospective, non-randomized study analyzing whether bilateral C5 foraminotomy can prevent C5P after open-door laminoplasty. Prophylactic bilateral foraminotomy done on 141 consecutive patients was seen to significantly decrease the incidence of postoperative C5P compared to a control group (1.4% and 6.4%, respectively; p<0.05). These results support the hypothesis that preoperative C5 foraminal stenosis is associated with a higher risk of C5P. Furthermore, these findings are consistent with the tethering phenomenon hypothesis regarding the pathomechanism of C5P. The only two patients in this study who developed C5P after undergoing prophylactic foraminotomy did not receive meticulous decompression of the C5 nerve root, leaving residual superior articular process. No patients in either group experienced postoperative infection or durotomy. Although the average operative time was longer in the foraminotomy group (102 minutes and 129 minutes, p<0.01), there was no significant difference in intraoperative blood loss between the two groups. In order to better elucidate the true effect of bilateral C5 foraminotomy, the procedure must be performed uniformly and randomized to all patients included.

With the current literature providing some evidence to suggest the efficacy of prophylactic bilateral C5 foraminotomies to reduce the incidence of postoperative C5P, there remains a need for a randomized, prospective study to investigate foraminotomy as a potentially beneficial procedure to all patients undergoing cervical decompression.

Significance of Proposed Study Bilateral foraminotomy has been correlated with a reduced risk of developing C5P following cervical decompression surgery, but an identical foraminotomy procedure has never been applied in a randomized manner to all qualifying patients in a study.5,6,7 Additionally, prophylactic foraminotomy has only been prospectively studied during laminoplasty. In the proposed study, bilateral foraminotomy will be randomized to patients receiving cervical decompression surgery (laminoplasty, laminectomy, fusion). Subsequently, incidence of C5P as well as other surgical complications will be monitored to determine efficacy of prophylactic C5 bilateral foraminotomy during cervical decompression.

Research Procedures:

This is a multicenter randomized trial, including the following sites: Cleveland Clinic, Columbia University Medical Center, and University of Southern California Spine Center. Patients undergoing cervical decompression surgery will be consented and enrolled if they meet the inclusion and exclusion criteria detailed above. The EPIC Electronic Medical Record database will be queried to retrieve medical records consistent with the study sample and to determine all cervical decompression surgeries. Patients' sex, race, date of birth, BMI, medical comorbidities, medications, history of spinal trauma or surgical intervention, smoking status/ history, spinal levels involved, type of surgery, operating surgeon, length of hospital stay, operative time, blood loss, in-hospital complications noted and patient complications following surgery will be obtained. Additionally, preoperative anteroposterior diameter of the spinal canal at C4-C5, ipsilateral foraminal diameter at C4-C5, and the morphological relationship between the spinal cord and the ipsilateral lamina (cord-lamina angle) will be obtained. Clinical outcome measures will be analyzed using standard statistical methods.

Intervention:

In addition to the decompression technique indicated directly for treatment of cervical myelopathy, bilateral keyhole foraminotomies will be done prophylactically in an attempt to minimize postoperative complications, specifically C5 Palsy. Under microscopic or loop magnification, a high-speed burr is used to perform the foraminotomy. The keyhole foraminotomy begins at the lamina-facet junction, with careful consideration of the amount of facet resection. Typically, only the medial one third is drilled. Then a 1- or 2-mm Kerrison punch can be carefully placed over the nerve root and then used to undercut the facet, ensuring that the spine is not destabilized by the foraminotomy. The amount of facet resection must not exceed 50% in order to preserve spine stability.

Consent:

All patients will be enrolled after completion of the attached informed consent form. All patients' information in this prospective study will be treated as confidential. This study involves no risk to the physician, or OR staff. A cervical foraminotomy is a common, short procedure (e.g. 5 minutes) that involves making more room for a cervical nerve root as it exits the spinal column. It is a procedure that all surgeons perform routinely, and in no way put the patient at risk for spine structural problems. Similarly, it does not impart additional measurable risk to the patient of neurological injury or infection over that risk already being incurred by the patient for the index procedure. Patients who are under the age of 18 will be excluded for previously mentioned scientific reasons. Women and minorities are expected to participate proportionally to their numbers diagnosed with cervical myelopathy.

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Anticipated Enrollment :
480 participants
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention Model:
Parallel Assignment
Masking:
Single (Participant)
Primary Purpose:
Treatment
Official Title:
A Randomized, Prospective Study Determining the Impact of Prophylactic Bilateral Foraminotomy During Cervical Decompression on C5 Palsy
Study Start Date :
Jun 1, 2016
Anticipated Primary Completion Date :
Dec 1, 2022
Anticipated Study Completion Date :
Dec 1, 2022

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Experimental: Foraminotomy Group

Prophylactic bilateral cervical keyhole foraminotomy will be done in addition to their decompression surgery

Procedure: Bilateral Cervical Keyhole Foraminotomy
Under microscopic or loop magnification, a high-speed burr is used to perform the foraminotomy. The keyhole foraminotomy begins at the lamina-facet junction, with careful consideration of the amount of facet resection. Typically, only the medial one third is drilled. Then a 1- or 2-mm Kerrison punch can be carefully placed over the nerve root and then used to undercut the facet, ensuring that the spine is not destabilized by the foraminotomy. The amount of facet resection must not exceed 50% in order to preserve spine stability.

Procedure: Cervical Decompression
Cervical decompression for myelopathy, including the following procedures: laminoplasty, laminectomy, discectomy and fusion

Active Comparator: Control Group

Cervical decompression will be done without prophylactic bilateral foraminotomy

Procedure: Cervical Decompression
Cervical decompression for myelopathy, including the following procedures: laminoplasty, laminectomy, discectomy and fusion

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcome Measures

  1. C5 Palsy [Upon discharge, 2 weeks postoperatively and 3 months postoperatively]

    Using manual muscle testing and upper extremity sensory exam findings to determine C5 palsy status. C5P is defined as: a reduction of at least 1 in deltoid and/or biceps brachii manual muscle testing scores compared to preoperative scores, without any deterioration of myelopathic symptoms.

Secondary Outcome Measures

  1. Preoperative anatomic measurements [Preoperative]

    Anteroposterior diameter, foraminal diameter and cord-lamina angle will be determined using preoperative computed tomography scan

  2. Operative time [Intra-operative measurement]

    Time length of operation

  3. Blood loss [Intra-operative measurement]

    Amount of blood loss during surgery

  4. Back Pain [Preoperative, 2 weeks postoperative and 3 months postoperative]

    Visual Analog Scale for Back Pain (0-10)

  5. Leg Pain [Preoperative, 2 weeks postoperative and 3 months postoperative]

    Visual Analog Scale for Leg Pain (0-10)

  6. Emergency department visit [within 90 days postoperatively]

    Subject has Emergency department visit

  7. Readmission to hospital [within 90 days postoperatively]

    Subject is readmitted to hospital within 90 days post-operatively

Eligibility Criteria

Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study:
18 Years and Older
Sexes Eligible for Study:
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
No
Inclusion Criteria:
  • Cleveland Clinic patients who have been diagnosed with cervical myelopathy, without radiculopathy, and will undergo posterior cervical decompression involving the C4-C5 interspace between 2016 and 2018. This includes patients undergoing cervical laminoplasty and cervical laminectomy and fusion.
Exclusion Criteria:
  • Any patient younger than 18 years of age will not be included on the basis of skeletal immaturity. Patients with C5 radiculopathy - defined in our study as the existence of preoperative deltoid muscle weakness in grade 3 or less by MMT - will be excluded. Any patients who have undergone previous cervical spine surgery, or who have any spinal malignancy, trauma or infection will be excluded in order to eliminate the confounding effect of multiple surgical interventions.

Contacts and Locations

Locations

Site City State Country Postal Code
1 Cleveland Clinic Foundation Cleveland Ohio United States 44195

Sponsors and Collaborators

  • The Cleveland Clinic
  • University of Southern California

Investigators

  • Principal Investigator: Thomas E Mroz, MD, The Cleveland Clinic

Study Documents (Full-Text)

None provided.

More Information

Publications

Responsible Party:
Thomas Mroz, MD, Director, Center for Spine Health, The Cleveland Clinic
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT03023696
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • 16-353
First Posted:
Jan 18, 2017
Last Update Posted:
Mar 14, 2022
Last Verified:
Feb 1, 2022
Individual Participant Data (IPD) Sharing Statement:
No
Plan to Share IPD:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
No
Keywords provided by Thomas Mroz, MD, Director, Center for Spine Health, The Cleveland Clinic
Additional relevant MeSH terms:

Study Results

No Results Posted as of Mar 14, 2022