Surgery, 'Sham' Equal in Treating Compression Fracture Pain

Injecting cement into spine no better than placebo procedure, study finds

Posted: August 5, 2009

By Amanda Gardner
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, Aug. 5 (HealthDay News) -- Two new studies suggest that vertebroplasty, a widely used surgery to help heal compression fractures, is no better than "sham" surgery when it comes to relieving pain and improving daily function.

But both procedures resulted in a significant decline in pain, so this is unlikely to signal the death knell for this widely performed surgery, experts noted.

"From a clinician's standpoint, it's important to read this data and be aware of it," said Dr. L. Gerard Toussaint III, an assistant professor of neuroscience and experimental therapeutics at Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine and a neurosurgeon at Texas Brain and Spine Institute in Bryan.

Vertebroplasty involves injecting a type of "cement" into the spine to stabilize it, thereby relieving pain and reducing disability in people who have had osteoporotic fractures.

The procedure is minimally invasive and often performed under local anesthetic, with the patient going home the same day, Toussaint said.

In the United States alone, some 750,000 people have vertebral compression fractures each year. According to an editorial that accompanies the studies, all appearing in the Aug. 6 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, the number of vertebroplasty procedures performed in the United States has doubled in the past six years, from 4.3 to 8.9 per 1,000 people.

Several studies have found great benefit from the procedure, but none of those were placebo-controlled.

Experts also worry that there may be a downside, with the surgery putting patients at higher risk for future fractures.

One trial, from Mayo Clinic researchers, randomly assigned 131 patients who had had one-to-three osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures to receive either vertebroplasty or a "sham" surgery without cement.

Those in the placebo arm went through the motions of surgery, including being brought into the procedure room and being sedated before surgeons put novocaine in the skin and over the bone, said study author Dr. David F. Kallmes, a professor of radiology at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.

After one month, both groups had experienced a similar, and significant, reduction in pain.

"Like every other trial, patients with vertebroplasty gained substantial benefit. Pain was cut almost in half," Kallmes said. "To our shock and amazement, however, there was no difference in pain relief, function or quality of life between the groups."

The second study, done in Australia, used essentially the same methodology with 78 participants.

Again, there were significant and similar declines in pain and other measurements in both groups six months after surgery.

"We conclude that the procedure seems to work but not apparently because of the cement," Kallmes said.

It could be the placebo effect or something as simple as the effect of the novocaine on the bone, breaking the cycle of pain, he added. Kallmes is currently enrolling patients in a trial to see if novocaine on the bone gives the same benefit as vertebroplasty.

But even now, many physicians do not favor vertebroplasty as the first-line treatment.

"I think we should take the middle road," Kallmes said. "We should discuss with the patient in a completely informed manner what the options are, and I think we have options. I still counsel patients that they should try ongoing medical therapy but I don't think it's unethical to do the procedure at this point. I think it's suboptimal."

"I always try bracing and analgesics and physical therapy to try to get the patients to feel better without any intervention at all," Toussaint added. "But if those measures don't work, I still think it is an option."

Also, Toussaint noted, "a lot of patients can't get their insurance companies to pay for medications that are more effective for osteoporosis treatment because they're expensive and new, but they will pay for the surgery."

More information

The Radiological Society of North America has more on vertebroplasty.

Kyphoplasty surgery

I am a 45 year old patient with a rare genetic disease TRPS 1. As a result I have severe osteoporosis with multiple compression fractures in my back. After a year and a half of pain, which even morphine didn’t take away, I had kyphoplasty surgery performed.The surgeon came highly recommended, and at the time of my appointment my pain level was at about an 8. My physician assured me that I would see a significant decrease in pain after I had this surgery, he stated “I have done this surgery hundreds of times and everyone has seen significant decrease in pain”. Becoming increasingly desperate for relief of pain I went ahead with surgery at levels T4-T8.

After surgery the doctor came into the hospital room and asked me how I felt and if my pain level had decreased, but it didn’t but he told me “give it some time and we will see you in 6 weeks”. However, I did see a change in my pain it had gotten worse with my right hand turning purple because circulation was being cut off. When I told my doctor this and after he looked at my swollen, purple hand he actually got upset with me and said “I don’t know how this could be. I have never had a patient tell me this after having surgery. Maybe you should get a second opinion because clearly there is nothing more we can do for you”. I was speechless at his reaction.

I did end up going to the Mayo Clinic in Rochester MN, at which time they not only did an exam, but they also did a MRI and that’s when I discovered that the cement that they injected had leaked out. The cement had created a extra bulge that was putting additional pressure on my already problematic spine which explained my symptoms. I had an MRI done right after the surgery (at the cost of $3800.00), but the doctor that performed the surgery never mentioned the fact that the cement had leaked out.

Today I am still in a tremendous amount of pain and my spine continues to collapse, my right hand is still swollen and purple, have lost all sensation in my finger tips and have been told that I have permanent nerve damage. Because my disease has now progressed especially in the C2-C7 area, I have been told that there is little they can do for me. My advice to people considering this surgery is “carefully consider the risks, explore other options like acupuncture, understand that it may not work for relieving pain, get a second or even a third opinion, talk to other patients of that particular doctor to explore his success rate, if a doctor is too eager and praises the surgery too much, question if it is truly for the patient or for profit. Last but not least, understand that you may end-up worse off than when you started, be prepared to deal with that too.”

Angelia Baldwin of SD @ Aug 07, 2009 05:10:26 AM

Or neither could work...

Also likely: neither the real shot or placebo shot work at all, but patients report improvement because they know that's what the doctor wants to hear.

andrew2 of MA @ Aug 06, 2009 14:06:05 PM

You don't say

My late father had a doctor who apparently foresaw the results of this study. His doctor prescribed opiates instead of surgery; even with the drugs my elderly father was in agony for TEN weeks before he had surgery. Afterward he was free of pain, but no amount of drugs could eliminate the memory of that nightmare.

Fast forward three years, my mother fell and suffered a compression fracture (she was now living near me, in another state). She was in so much pain she could not get out of bed and literally had trouble breathing. Warily, I asked the neurosurgeon what course of treatment he would recommend. "We'll do surgery, of course, to relieve pain and stabilize the fracture", he said, giving me an odd look. As in, why would we consider anything else? After the operation she was fine.

I have to wonder if the patients in this study had fractures of a different type, or different severity, than the ones my parents had. In light of my family's experience, this seems very, very odd.

Keith R. Pedersen of TX @ Aug 06, 2009 09:07:26 AM

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