Clinical and radiological evaluation of cervical disc arthroplasty with 5-year follow-up: a prospective study of 384 patients

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TitreClinical and radiological evaluation of cervical disc arthroplasty with 5-year follow-up: a prospective study of 384 patients
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuteursDufour T., Beaurain J., Huppert J., Dam-Hieu P., Bernard P., Steib J.P
JournalEUROPEAN SPINE JOURNAL
Volume28
Pagination2371-2379
Date PublishedOCT
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN0940-6719
Mots-clésAdjacent segment disease, Cervical total disc replacement, Clinical results, Heterotopic ossification, Mobi-C, Radiological results
Résumé

Background Cervical total disc replacement was developed to avoid known complications of cervical fusion. The purpose of this paper was to provide 5-year follow-up results of an ongoing prospective study after implantation of cervical disc prosthesis. Methods Three hundred and eighty-four patients were treated using Mobi-C cervical disc (Zimmer Biomet, Troyes, France) and included in a prospective multicentre study. Routine clinical and radiological examinations were reported preoperatively and postoperatively with up to 5-year follow-up. Complications and revision surgeries were also explored. Results Results at 5 years showed significant improvement in all clinical outcomes (NDI, VAS for arm and neck pain, SF-36 PCS and MCS). Motion at index level increased significantly from 6.0 degrees preoperatively to 8.0 degrees, and 72.1% of the implanted segments were still mobile (referring to threshold of ROM > 3 degrees). Proximal and distal adjacent discs showed no significant change in average motion 5 years after surgery compared to baseline. Ossification resulting in complete fusion was observed in 16.4% of the implanted segments. Distal and proximal adjacent disc degeneration occurred in 42.2% and 39.1% of patients, respectively. Complications rate was 8.9%, and 1.5% of the patients had reoperation at the index level. Surgery rate of adjacent discs was 2.9%. An increased percentage of working patients and a decrease in medication consumption were observed. At 5 years, 93.3% patients were satisfied regarding the overall outcome. Conclusions In this study, favourable 5-year follow-up clinical and radiological outcomes were observed with a low rate of adjacent level surgery. [GRAPHICS] .

DOI10.1007/s00586-019-06069-z