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Comparison of Clinical Outcomes, Complications Rate and Treatment Costs of Mini-TLIF and MIDLIF in the Treatment of Discogenic Low Back Pain

Comparison of Clinical Outcomes, Complications Rate and Treatment Costs of Mini-TLIF and MIDLIF in the Treatment of Discogenic Low Back Pain

Recruiting
18 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

Background

Degenerative disc disease (DDD) is the leading cause of lower back pain and disability, which prevalence increasing with age. When conservative treatment fails, surgical methods of spinal fusion are employed. Minimally invasive techniques, including minimally invasive transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion (MIS-TLIF) and midline lumbar interbody fusion (MIDLIF), have well-documented advantages over traditional open transforaminal interbody fusion (open-TLIF). However, data comparing these two minimally invasive methods in treating DDD are minimal and sometimes contradictory. I am running a few minutes late; my previous meeting is running over.

Methods This is a prospective, randomized, partially blinded, two-arm trial aiming to compare the outcomes, complications, and treatment costs of MIS-TLIF and MIDLIF in patients with discogenic low back pain. A total of 100 adult patients with lumbosacral spine pain and radicular symptoms, unresponsive to conservative treatment for over one year, will be enrolled. Patients will be randomized (1:1) into two arms: MIS-TLIF (control, n=50) and MIDLIF (intervention, n=50), with a 12-month follow-up. Inclusion criteria include age ≥18 years and discopathy at one or two levels requiring interbody stabilization. Exclusion criteria include multilevel pathology, spinal deformities, and pain causes other than degenerative disease. Primary endpoints assess pain (VAS, NRS scales), disability (COMI, ODI questionnaires), and quality of life (EQ-5D-5L questionnaire) at 1, 3, 6, and 12 months post-surgery. Secondary endpoints include complication rates (nerve root damage, infections), costs (hospitalization, implants), length of hospital stay, procedure duration, blood loss, morphometric parameters (intervertebral space height), and adjacent segment disease based on imaging studies (MRI, CT, X-ray). Data analysis uses parametric/non-parametric tests (e.g., t-test, Mann-Whitney) in the R software. The trial adheres to the Helsinki Declaration, with ethics approval (no. 112/2024).

Discussion Data on the comparison of MIDLIF and MIS-TLIF in treating DDD are minimal and inconsistent. Some reports have advantaged MIDLIF in shorter operative time, decreased intraoperative blood loss, and reduced hospital stays, while others favor MIS-TLIF. This trial addresses these gaps by providing high-quality evidence on clinical superiority, cost-effectiveness, and long-term outcomes compering MIDLIF and MIS-TLIF. There is a high need for a high-quality, prospective study to examine this problem.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Discogenic lower lumbar-sacral pain lasting longer than one year
  • Failure of conservative treatment, including rehabilitation and pain management
  • Lumbar discopathy qualified for interbody fusion and pedicle screw stabilization
  • Informed consent of the patient for the study and proposed treatment

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Contraindications to surgery under general anesthesia
  • Age < 18 years
  • Pregnancy, breastfeeding
  • Lack of informed consent to participate in the study
  • Lumbar-sac discopathy requiring surgical treatment at more than two levels
  • Spinal deformities: adult idiopathic scoliosis, degenerative scoliosis, deformity due to spinal malignancy, inflammatory spinal disease, post-traumatic, or associated with congenital anomalies
  • Lower lumbar-sacral pain syndrome, which, in the investigator's opinion, has an etiology other than degenerative spine disease (e.g., cancer-related pain, ankylosing spondylitis)
  • Spinal oncology disease
  • True and degenerative spondylolisthesis
  • Contraindications to performing MRI of the lumbar-sacral spine

Study details
    Lower Back Pain Chronic
    Lumbar Degenerative Disease
    Lumbar Disc Degeneration
    Degenerative Disc Disease(DDD)

NCT07127380

Copernicus Memorial Hospital

15 October 2025

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