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American Journal of Medical Quality
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An Evidence-Based Approach to Spine Surgery

R. Todd Allen, MD, PhD

University of California San Diego (UCSD) Medical Center; San Diego Veterans Affairs Medical Centers, San Diego, California, rtdallen{at}hotmail.com

Jeffrey A. Rihn, MD

Thomas Jefferson Hospital, The Rothman Institute, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Steven D. Glassman, MD

Leatherman Spine Center, Louisville, Kentucky

Bradford Currier, MD

Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota

Todd J. Albert, MD

Thomas Jefferson Hospital, The Rothman Institute, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Frank M. Phillips, MD

Rush University, Rush-Presbyterian-St Luke s Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois

Health care reform will emphasize evidence-based medicine to provide the highest quality care. Recent literature has emerged in spinal surgery that has profoundly increased the evidence base for several spinal procedures. There is now good evidence from randomized controlled trials that surgical treatment of symptomatic lumbar disc herniation, decompression for spinal stenosis, and decompression and fusion for degenerative spondylolisthesis all offer significant clinical benefit in the face of serious back and radicular pain when compared with nonsurgical care. Studies of nonsurgical and surgical treatments for chronic low back pain are inconclusive, limited by study design/methodology. Continuing to increase study quality in the field of spine surgery is more important now than ever before. Optimizing diagnostic specificity, surgical indications, and measuring outcomes with validated instruments should help the spine care community acquire essential data to provide the highest quality evidence-based care, while simultaneously eliminating procedures that lack evidence of efficacy or value.

Key Words: spine • surgery • evidence-based medicine • value • quality

American Journal of Medical Quality, Vol. 24, No. 6 Suppl, 15S-24S (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/1062860609348743


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