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Impact of Pre-operative Duration of Symptoms on Patient Satisfaction, Outcomes and Complications after Lumbar Discectomy: A Propensity Matched Comparison.

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STUDY DESIGN Observational study. OBJECTIVE To identify associations between preoperative symptom duration and postoperative patient satisfaction. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA Sciatica due to lumbar disc herniation (LDH) is a cause… Click to show full abstract

STUDY DESIGN Observational study. OBJECTIVE To identify associations between preoperative symptom duration and postoperative patient satisfaction. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA Sciatica due to lumbar disc herniation (LDH) is a cause of disability and reduced quality life. Patients with severe pain and disability or were recovery is unacceptably slow, surgical intervention can be advised. For these patients, evidence-based recommendations on the timing of the surgical intervention needs to be established. METHODS All patients who underwent discectomy at a Spine Centre, due to radicular pain from June 2010 to May 2019 were included. Pre- and postoperative data including demographic data, smoking, consumption of pain medication, comorbidity, back and leg-pain, health-related quality of life as measured by EQ-5D, ODI, previous spine surgery, sick leave and duration of back and leg-pain prior to surgery were utilized. The patients were divided into four groups based on their self-reported duration of leg-pain prior to surgery. To minimize baseline differences between the groups, propensity-score matching was employed in a 1:1 fashion, balancing the groups on all reported preoperative factors. RESULTS Of 1607 patients undergoing lumbar discectomy, four matched cohorts based on their self-reported duration of leg-pain prior to surgery were created. Each cohort consisted of 150 patients well balanced on preoperative factors. Overall 62.7% of the patients were satisfied with the surgical result ranging from 74.0% in the<3 months group to 48.7% in the>24 months group (P<0.000). The portion of patients achieving a minimum clinically important difference for EQ-5D decreased from 77.4% with early intervention to 55.6% in the late group (P<0.000). The number of surgical complications were not affected by the duration of pre-operative leg-pain. CONCLUSION We found significant difference in patient satisfaction and health-related quality of life in patients related to the duration of pre-operative leg-pain due to symptomatic LDH. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE 3.

Keywords: leg pain; patient satisfaction; pain; pre operative; duration

Journal Title: Spine
Year Published: 2023

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