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Predicting Outcomes After Surgical Decompression for Mild Degenerative Cervical Myelopathy: Moving Beyond the mJOA to Identify Surgical Candidates
by
Badhiwala, Jetan H
, Hachem, Laureen D
, Merali, Zamir
, Witiw, Christopher D
, Fehlings, Michael G
, Akbar, Muhammad A
, Almenawer, Saleh A
, Nassiri, Farshad
, Schomacher, Markus
, Wilson, Jefferson R
in
Algorithms
/ Care and treatment
/ Decompression (Physiology)
/ Neck pain
/ Nervous system
/ Neurosurgery
/ Patient outcomes
/ Patients
/ Spinal cord compression
/ Surgery
/ Surgical outcomes
2020
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Predicting Outcomes After Surgical Decompression for Mild Degenerative Cervical Myelopathy: Moving Beyond the mJOA to Identify Surgical Candidates
by
Badhiwala, Jetan H
, Hachem, Laureen D
, Merali, Zamir
, Witiw, Christopher D
, Fehlings, Michael G
, Akbar, Muhammad A
, Almenawer, Saleh A
, Nassiri, Farshad
, Schomacher, Markus
, Wilson, Jefferson R
in
Algorithms
/ Care and treatment
/ Decompression (Physiology)
/ Neck pain
/ Nervous system
/ Neurosurgery
/ Patient outcomes
/ Patients
/ Spinal cord compression
/ Surgery
/ Surgical outcomes
2020
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Predicting Outcomes After Surgical Decompression for Mild Degenerative Cervical Myelopathy: Moving Beyond the mJOA to Identify Surgical Candidates
by
Badhiwala, Jetan H
, Hachem, Laureen D
, Merali, Zamir
, Witiw, Christopher D
, Fehlings, Michael G
, Akbar, Muhammad A
, Almenawer, Saleh A
, Nassiri, Farshad
, Schomacher, Markus
, Wilson, Jefferson R
in
Algorithms
/ Care and treatment
/ Decompression (Physiology)
/ Neck pain
/ Nervous system
/ Neurosurgery
/ Patient outcomes
/ Patients
/ Spinal cord compression
/ Surgery
/ Surgical outcomes
2020
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Predicting Outcomes After Surgical Decompression for Mild Degenerative Cervical Myelopathy: Moving Beyond the mJOA to Identify Surgical Candidates
Journal Article
Predicting Outcomes After Surgical Decompression for Mild Degenerative Cervical Myelopathy: Moving Beyond the mJOA to Identify Surgical Candidates
2020
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Overview
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Patients with mild degenerative cervical myelopathy (DCM) represent a heterogeneous population, and indications for surgical decompression remain controversial.
OBJECTIVE
To dissociate patient phenotypes within the broader population of mild DCM associated with degree of impairment in baseline quality of life (QOL) and surgical outcomes.
METHODS
This was a post hoc analysis of patients with mild DCM (modified Japanese Orthopedic Association [mJOA] 15-17) enrolled in the AOSpine CSM-NA/CSM-I studies. A k-means clustering algorithm was applied to baseline QOL (Short Form-36 [SF-36]) scores to separate patients into 2 clusters. Baseline variables and surgical outcomes (change in SF-36 scores at 1 yr) were compared between clusters. A k-nearest neighbors (kNN) algorithm was used to evaluate the ability to classify patients into the 2 clusters by significant baseline clinical variables.
RESULTS
One hundred eighty-five patients were eligible. Two groups were generated by k-means clustering. Cluster 1 had a greater proportion of females (44% vs 28%, P = .029) and symptoms of neck pain (32% vs 11%, P = .001), gait difficulty (57% vs 40%, P = .025), or weakness (75% vs 59%, P = .041). Although baseline mJOA correlated with neither baseline QOL nor outcomes, cluster 1 was associated with significantly greater improvement in disability (P = .003) and QOL (P < .001) scores following surgery. A kNN algorithm could predict cluster classification with 71% accuracy by neck pain, motor symptoms, and gender alone.
CONCLUSION
We have dissociated a distinct patient phenotype of mild DCM, characterized by neck pain, motor symptoms, and female gender associated with greater impairment in QOL and greater response to surgery.
Publisher
Oxford University Press,Copyright by the Congress of Neurological Surgeons,Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc
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