Twelve-month results from a randomized controlled trial comparing differential target multiplexed spinal cord stimulation and conventional spinal cord stimulation in subjects with chronic refractory axial low back pain not eligible for spine surgery.

Conventional SCS Differential target multiplexed SCS Nonsurgical candidates Persistent spinal pain syndrome type 1 Randomized controlled trial Spinal cord stimulation

Journal

North American Spine Society journal
ISSN: 2666-5484
Titre abrégé: N Am Spine Soc J
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 9918335076906676

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Sep 2024
Historique:
received: 10 05 2024
revised: 03 07 2024
accepted: 09 07 2024
medline: 4 9 2024
pubmed: 4 9 2024
entrez: 4 9 2024
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Successful treatments for intractable chronic low back pain (CLBP) in patients who are not eligible for surgical interventions are scarce. The superior efficacy of differential target multiplexed spinal cord stimulation (DTM SCS) to conventional SCS (Conv-SCS) on the treatment of CLBP in patients with persistent spinal pain syndrome (PSPS) who have failed surgical interventions (PSPS-T2) motivated the evaluation of DTM SCS versus Conv-SCS on PSPS patients who are non-surgical candidates (PSPS-T1). This is a prospective, open label, crossover, post-market randomized controlled trial in 20 centers across the United States. Eligible patients were randomized to either DTM SCS or Conv-SCS in a 1:1 ratio. Primary endpoint was CLBP responder rate (percentage of subjects with ≥50% CLBP relief) at 3-month in randomized subjects who completed trialing (modified intention-to-treat population). Patients were followed up to 12 months. Secondary endpoints included change of CLBP and leg pain, responder rates, changes in disability, quality of life, patient satisfaction and global impression of change, and safety profile. An optional crossover was available at 6-month to all patients. About 121 PSPS-T1 subjects with CLBP and leg pain mostly associated with degenerative disc disease and radiculopathy and who were not eligible for spine surgery were randomized. CLBP responder rate with DTM SCS (93.5%) was superior to Conv-SCS (36.4%) at the primary endpoint. Superior CLBP responder rates (88.1%-90.5%) were obtained with DTM SCS at all other timepoints. Mean CLBP reduction with DTM SCS (6.52 cm) was superior to that with Conv-SCS (3.01 cm) at the primary endpoint. Similar CLBP reductions (6.23-6.43 cm) were obtained with DTM SCS at other timepoints. DTM SCS provided significantly better leg pain reduction and responder rate, improvement of disability and quality of life, and better patient satisfaction and global impression of change. 90.9% of Conv-SCS subjects who crossed over were CLBP responders at completion of the study. Similar safety profiles were observed between the two groups. DTM SCS for chronic CLBP in nonsurgical candidates is superior to Conv-SCS. Improvements were sustained and provided significant benefits on the management of these patients.

Sections du résumé

Background UNASSIGNED
Successful treatments for intractable chronic low back pain (CLBP) in patients who are not eligible for surgical interventions are scarce. The superior efficacy of differential target multiplexed spinal cord stimulation (DTM SCS) to conventional SCS (Conv-SCS) on the treatment of CLBP in patients with persistent spinal pain syndrome (PSPS) who have failed surgical interventions (PSPS-T2) motivated the evaluation of DTM SCS versus Conv-SCS on PSPS patients who are non-surgical candidates (PSPS-T1).
Methods UNASSIGNED
This is a prospective, open label, crossover, post-market randomized controlled trial in 20 centers across the United States. Eligible patients were randomized to either DTM SCS or Conv-SCS in a 1:1 ratio. Primary endpoint was CLBP responder rate (percentage of subjects with ≥50% CLBP relief) at 3-month in randomized subjects who completed trialing (modified intention-to-treat population). Patients were followed up to 12 months. Secondary endpoints included change of CLBP and leg pain, responder rates, changes in disability, quality of life, patient satisfaction and global impression of change, and safety profile. An optional crossover was available at 6-month to all patients.
Results UNASSIGNED
About 121 PSPS-T1 subjects with CLBP and leg pain mostly associated with degenerative disc disease and radiculopathy and who were not eligible for spine surgery were randomized. CLBP responder rate with DTM SCS (93.5%) was superior to Conv-SCS (36.4%) at the primary endpoint. Superior CLBP responder rates (88.1%-90.5%) were obtained with DTM SCS at all other timepoints. Mean CLBP reduction with DTM SCS (6.52 cm) was superior to that with Conv-SCS (3.01 cm) at the primary endpoint. Similar CLBP reductions (6.23-6.43 cm) were obtained with DTM SCS at other timepoints. DTM SCS provided significantly better leg pain reduction and responder rate, improvement of disability and quality of life, and better patient satisfaction and global impression of change. 90.9% of Conv-SCS subjects who crossed over were CLBP responders at completion of the study. Similar safety profiles were observed between the two groups.
Conclusion UNASSIGNED
DTM SCS for chronic CLBP in nonsurgical candidates is superior to Conv-SCS. Improvements were sustained and provided significant benefits on the management of these patients.

Identifiants

pubmed: 39229594
doi: 10.1016/j.xnsj.2024.100528
pii: S2666-5484(24)00221-X
pmc: PMC11369449
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

100528

Informations de copyright

© 2024 The Author(s).

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

One or more of the authors declare financial or professional relationships on ICMJE-NASSJ disclosure forms.

Auteurs

Thomas White (T)

Procura Pain and Spine, Pain Management. 111 Vision Park Blvd #100, Shenandoah, TX 77384.

Rafael Justiz (R)

Oklahoma Pain Physicians, Pain Management, 4117 NW 122nd St #C, Oklahoma City, OK 73120.

Wilson Almonte (W)

Victoria Pain and Rehabilitation, Pain Management, 6902 Zac Lentz Parkway, Victoria, TX 77904.

Velimir Micovic (V)

Pain Management Consultants, Pain Management, 7964 Summerlin Lakes Dr, Fort Myers, FL 33907.

Binit Shah (B)

Carolinas Pain Center, Pain Management, 9735 Kincey Ave STE 100, Huntersville, NC 28078.

Eric Anderson (E)

Advanced Pain Institute of Texas, Pain Management, 500 W Main St Suite 230, Lewisville, TX 75057.

Leonardo Kapural (L)

Carolinas Pain Institute, Pain Management, 145 Kimel Park Dr #330, Winston-Salem, NC 27103.

Harold Cordner (H)

Florida Pain Management Associates, Pain Management, 13825 U.S. Hwy 1, Sebastian, FL 32958.

Amr El-Naggar (A)

DREZ One, Pain Management, 75 Hail Knob Rd, Somerset, KY 42503.

Michael Fishman (M)

Center for Interventional Pain and Spine, Pain Management, 160 N Pointe Blvd Suite 208, Lancaster, PA 17604.

Yashar Eshraghi (Y)

Ochsner Medical Center, Pain Management, 1514 Jefferson Highway, New Orleans, LA 70121.

Philip Kim (P)

Center for Interventional Pain and Spine, Pain Management, 160 N Pointe Blvd Suite 208, Lancaster, PA 17604.

Al Abd-Elsayed (A)

University of Wisconsin, Pain Management, 102 S Park St 3rd floor, Madison, WI 53715.

Krishnan Chakravarthy (K)

Coastal Research Institute, Pain Management, 6221 Metropolitan Street, Ste. 201, Carlsbad, CA 92009.
VA San Diego Healthcare, Pain Management, 3350 La Jolla Village Drive, San Diego, CA 92161.

Yoann Millet (Y)

Procura Pain and Spine, Pain Management. 111 Vision Park Blvd #100, Shenandoah, TX 77384.

Mahendra Sanapati (M)

Global Scientific Innovations, Pain Management, 1101 Professional Blvd, Ste 208, Evansville, IN 47714.

Nathan Harrison (N)

Ochsner Medical Center, Pain Management, 1514 Jefferson Highway, New Orleans, LA 70121.

Brandon Goff (B)

Burkhart Research Institute for Orthopaedics, Pain Management, 400 Concord Plaza Dr, San Antonio, TX, 78216.

Mayank Gupta (M)

Neuroscience Research Center, Pain Management. 10995 Quivira Road, Overland Park, KS 66210.

Prabhdeep Grewal (P)

Burkhart Research Institute for Orthopaedics, Pain Management, 400 Concord Plaza Dr, San Antonio, TX, 78216.

Michael Wilkinson (M)

Pain Medicine Associates Surgery Center, Pain Management, 101 Med Tech Pkwy #200, Johnson City, TN 37604.

Richard Bundschu (R)

Coastal Orthopedics and Sports Medicine and Pain Management, Pain Management, 6202 17th Ave W, Bradenton, FL 34209.

Andrew Will (A)

Twin Cities Pain Clinic; Pain Management, 7235 Ohms Lane, Edina, MN.

Pankaj Satija (P)

Pain & Headache Centers of Texas, Pain Management, 313 La Concha Lane, Suite 120, Houston, TX 77054.

Sean Li (S)

National Spine and Pain Premier Pain Centers, Pain Management, 170 Ave at the Cmns Suite 6, Shrewsbury, NJ 07702.

Scott Dulebohn (S)

Pain Medicine Associates Surgery Center, Pain Management, 101 Med Tech Pkwy #200, Johnson City, TN 37604.

John Broadnax (J)

Advanced Pain Institute of Texas, Pain Management, 500 W Main St Suite 230, Lewisville, TX 75057.

Gennady Gekht (G)

Coastal Orthopedics and Sports Medicine and Pain Management, Pain Management, 6202 17th Ave W, Bradenton, FL 34209.

Ken Wu (K)

Procura Pain and Spine, Pain Management. 111 Vision Park Blvd #100, Shenandoah, TX 77384.

Steven Falowski (S)

Center for Interventional Pain and Spine, Pain Management, 160 N Pointe Blvd Suite 208, Lancaster, PA 17604.

Wesley Park (W)

SGX Medical LLC, Clinical Research, 33 Derby Way, Bloomington, IL 61704.

David L Cedeno (DL)

SGX Medical LLC, Clinical Research, 33 Derby Way, Bloomington, IL 61704.

Ricardo Vallejo (R)

SGX Medical LLC, Clinical Research, 33 Derby Way, Bloomington, IL 61704.

Classifications MeSH