ABSTRACT
Lumbar disc herniation (LDH) is a frequent cause of low back pain and radiculopathy, disability, and diminution in quality of life. While nonsurgical care remains the mainstay of initial treatment, symptoms that persist for prolonged periods of time are well treated with discectomy surgery. A large body of evidence shows that, in patients with unremitting symptoms despite a reasonable period of nonsurgical treatment, discectomy surgery is safe and efficacious. In patients with symptoms lasting greater than 6 weeks, various forms of discectomy (open, microtubular, and endoscopic) are superior to continued nonsurgical treatment. The small but significant proportion of patients with recurrent disc herniation experience less improvement overall than patients who do not experience reherniation after primary discectomy. Lumbar discectomy patients with large annular defects (≥6 mm wide) are at a higher risk for recurrent herniation and revision surgery. Annular closure via a bone-anchored device has been shown to decrease the rate of recurrent disc herniation and associated reoperation in these high-risk patients. After a detailed review of the literature, current clinical evidence supports discectomy (open, microtubular, or endoscopic discectomy) as a medically necessary procedure for the treatment of LDH with radiculopathy in indicated patients. Furthermore, there is new scientific evidence that supports the use of bone-anchored annular closure in patients with large annular defects, who are at greater risk for recurrent disc herniation.
INTRODUCTION
Lumbar disc herniation (LDH) is a localized displacement of intervertebral disc material beyond the normal perimeter of the disc space.1,2 Depending on the volume, location, and type of herniation, adjacent neural structures may become compressed, resulting in radiculopathy associated with pain, numbness, or weakness.3,4 Impingement of the lumbosacral nerves by a herniated disc is the leading cause of sciatica, which is characterized by low back pain and radiating leg pain.5
Patient history and physical examination are the most important steps in the diagnosis of LDH with radiculopathy.1 The physical examination may include manual muscle testing, sensory testing, supine straight leg raise, Lasegue's sign, and crossed Lasegue's sign.1 Other functional tests (eg, Bell test, hyperextension test, reflex tests, nerve stretch test, lumbar range of motion test) have varying degrees of sensitivity and specificity, but can be incorporated depending on a physician's experience and preference.1,6 If the patient history and physical examination results are consistent with symptomatic LDH, noninvasive visualization of the neural structures is used to confirm disc herniation. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is considered the most appropriate modality to confirm LDH, but computed tomography (CT) with or without myelography should be considered if MRI is contraindicated or inconclusive.7,8
Many patients with symptomatic LDH, particularly those with mild or moderate symptoms, will improve with nonsurgical management, which may include manual spinal manipulation, physical therapy, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, analgesics, and/or corticosteroid injections.1,9,10 Results from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have shown that 35% to 54% of patients assigned to continued nonsurgical care undergo discectomy within 6 months due to persistent or aggravating symptoms.11–14 A survey of 814 neurosurgeons found that 46% of respondents recommended a minimum of 4 to 8 weeks of nonsurgical management before surgery is indicated, 34% recommended 8 weeks or more, and 20% recommended less than 4 weeks.15 Based on a health technology assessment, which included a systematic literature review, public feedback, and voting from a clinical committee, the Washington State Health Care Authority requires at least 6 weeks of nonsurgical care unless progressive motor weakness is present.16,17 Thus, the decision to continue nonsurgical care or undergo surgery considers the patient history, physical examination, radiological findings, and severity of symptoms.
When surgery is indicated, discectomy is the primary surgical intervention for LDH with radiculopathy.18 The principal goals of discectomy are to surgically remove the displaced disc material, decompress the affected neural structures to relieve symptoms, and minimize the chance of recurrence by removing loose or degenerated material from the intervertebral space and surrounding area. Discectomy can be performed through an open, mini-open (eg, microtubular), or endoscopic approach. Each of these methods enables direct, light-based visualization, in contrast to percutaneous techniques that solely use intra-operative radiological imaging for indirect visualization.
Upon completion of the discectomy, prior to closure, there are currently no widely accepted practices for repair of the annulus fibrosus. Studies have shown that large (≥6 mm wide), unrepaired annular defects increase the risk of symptom recurrence and additional surgery.19,20 These data have led to the development of several annular closure or repair devices to help reduce the risk of recurrence and reoperation in this high-risk patient population. Most of those techniques and closure systems lacked clinical evidence and are no longer commercially available. A bone-anchored implant is Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved and has clinical evidence demonstrating effectiveness for large annular defects.
The aim of this International Society for the Advancement of Spine Surgery (ISASS) Policy Statement is to discuss the evidence from RCTs, prospective cohort studies, and recent meta-analyses to inform treatment and coverage recommendations for primary discectomy and annular repair in indicated patients with LDH and radiculopathy.
SUMMARY OF THE CLINICAL EVIDENCE
Discectomy Versus Nonsurgical Care for LDH With Radiculopathy
Several RCTs and prospective cohort studies have shown that discectomy provides faster and/or greater pain relief, recovery from disability, and patient satisfaction compared to continued nonsurgical care (Table 1).11–14,21,22 Clinical evidence also indicates that discectomy-related surgical complications are rare. The most common complications include dural tears (1%–4% of cases),11,13,14,21,23 blood transfusions (2%–3% of cases),14,21,23 and neural injuries (0.4% of cases).21 None of the RCTs or prospective cohort studies reported cases of perioperative mortality,11–14,17,21–25 indicating that the risk of discectomy-related death is negligible. A recent (2019) analysis of 34 639 LDH operations performed over 15 years found that complications occurred in only 2.7% (95% confidence interval: 2.6%–2.9%) of cases, with no perioperative deaths.18
Early evidence on the efficacy of discectomy for symptomatic LDH came from a large, multicenter prospective cohort study called the Maine Lumbar Spine Study (MLSS).21 The MLSS involved 275 patients treated surgically and 232 treated with nonsurgical care. At the 1-year follow-up, patients treated with discectomy reported greater improvement in back and leg pain (P < .001), functional status (P < .001), and overall satisfaction (P = .005) compared to nonsurgical care.21 Additionally, a larger percentage of patients in the discectomy group reported complete relief from their predominant symptoms (31% versus 11%; P < .001). Long-term follow-up analyses in the MLSS reported that these greater improvements among discectomy-treated patients persisted over 5 years for leg pain, back pain, function, and satisfaction (P ≤ .001) and over 8 to 10 years for leg pain and function (P < .05).26,27
The Spine Patient Outcomes Research Trial (SPORT) is a large, National Institutes of Health-funded, multicenter RCT and an observational cohort study comparing discectomy versus nonsurgical care in patients with lumbar radiculopathy secondary to LDH. The RCT included 501 patients with confirmed symptomatic LDH treated with discectomy (n = 245) or nonsurgical care (n = 256).14 Patients eligible for surgery had radicular pain, a positive straight leg test, or neurologic deficit, failed at least 6 weeks of nonsurgical care, and had radiologically confirmed LDH. In the RCT arm of the study, 45% of patients randomized to nonsurgical care crossed over to surgery, and 40% of patients randomized to surgery chose to continue with nonsurgical care. Furthermore, patients that crossed over to surgery had significantly worse baseline scores for Short Form 36 (SF-36) bodily pain (P = .03) and function (P < .001), Oswestry Disability Index (ODI; P < .001), sciatica frequency (P = .009), and sciatica bothersomeness (P = .001). These confounding events likely explain why the intent-to-treat (ITT) analysis did not detect significant differences in pain, function, or disability between treatment groups. ITT analysis is intended to reduce the risk of bias by evaluating results according to the randomized treatment allocation, irrespective of the treatment that patients actually received.28 In RCTs with high crossover or nonadherence rates, ITT analyses are difficult to interpret, and an as-treated analysis is recommended to determine the treatment effect.29 In the SPORT RCT, an as-treated analysis evaluated outcomes based on the adjusted covariates of time and treatments actually received.14 Those results showed significantly better improvements in the SF-36 pain and function scores, ODI, sciatica scores, as well as higher patient satisfaction, at all timepoints in the discectomy group compared to nonsurgical care.14
In addition to randomized patients, SPORT also included observational cohorts comprised of patients that declined to be in the RCT.23 In the observational cohorts, 528 patients were treated with discectomy, and 191 patients received nonsurgical care over the first 2 years. Compared to the nonsurgical group, patients in the discectomy group had significantly greater improvements in primary outcomes (ie, bodily pain, physical function, and ODI) and secondary outcomes (ie, sciatica bothersomeness, satisfaction, and self-rated improvement) over 2 years of follow up (P < .001 for all metrics).23 An as-treated subgroup analysis of combined observational and randomized cohorts demonstrated that all 37 subgroups experienced significantly greater improvements with discectomy compared to nonsurgical care (P < .05).30 Some of the subgroups with the greatest treatment effect from discectomy included older patients (age > 41 years), those with deteriorating symptoms at baseline, and those without joint problems.30 Longer term follow-up studies of the combined SPORT cohorts confirmed that the benefits of discectomy persisted through 8 years.31–33 As-treated analyses at 8 years follow up adjusted for potential covariates, such as demographics, smoking status, and LDH location, which demonstrated significant benefits in favor of discectomy for all primary and secondary outcomes of pain, function, sciatica bothersomeness, patient satisfaction, and self-rated improvement (P < .001 for all metrics).33 Together, the SPORT study as a whole represents robust and high-quality clinical evidence in support of discectomy compared with nonsurgical care in both short- and long-term benefits for treatment of LDH with radiculopathy among indicated patients.
Three more RCTs and 1 prospective cohort study demonstrated positive outcomes with discectomy compared to nonsurgical care at early timepoints.11–13,22 Peul et al11 conducted a multicenter RCT comparing 141 patients treated with discectomy versus 142 patients treated with continued nonsurgical care. All patients had radiculopathy and radiologically confirmed LDH. Thirty-nine percent of patients assigned to nonsurgical care crossed over to discectomy within 1 year, and 11% assigned to surgery continued with nonsurgical care. Based on ITT analysis, discectomy resulted in greater symptom relief at early timepoints of 2 to 12 weeks. By 1 year, the differences were not statistically significant; however, this finding, based on ITT analysis, is confounded by the high crossover rate from nonsurgical care to discectomy. The authors did not report analysis of the as-treated populations.
Butterman conducted a single-site RCT comparing 50 patients treated with discectomy versus 50 patients treated with epidural steroid injections.13 All patients had clinical symptoms of LDH, radiologically confirmed disc herniation that encompassed more than 25% of the spinal canal cross-sectional area, and failed at least 6 weeks of nonsurgical care. Twenty-seven (54%) patients failed epidural steroid injection treatment and crossed over to discectomy. The results demonstrated that discectomy significantly improved leg pain, bodily pain, ODI, and neurological deficit scores 1 to 3 months after surgery (P < .05), suggesting an early clinical benefit of discectomy. After 3 months, outcomes measures were not statistically different between treatment groups; the only exception was that leg pain was improved with discectomy at 4 to 6 months (P < .05).
Österman et al12 conducted a small RCT analyzing 56 patients: 28 treated with discectomy and 28 with nonsurgical care. Similar to SPORT and Peul et al, 39% of patients randomized to nonsurgical care underwent surgery by 1 year. All patients allocated to the surgery group underwent discectomy. Results from the ITT analysis showed that patients treated with discectomy had significantly greater patient satisfaction through 2 years of follow up and an early advantage in the reduction of leg pain at 6 weeks follow up. Additional trends in favor of discectomy were noted; however, interpretation is limited by the small sample size and large number of crossover patients.
Recently, in a prospective cohort study, Gugliotta et al22 reported that patients treated with discectomy had significantly reduced North American Spine Society (NASS) questionnaire back pain at 6 weeks compared to nonsurgical treatment, indicating a faster improvement in pain with discectomy. No differences were observed at later timepoints; however, 42% of patients in the surgery group and 55% in the nonsurgical care group were lost to follow up, which limits the data quality at later timepoints.
In contrast, 1 RCT of 40 patients and 1 prospective cohort study of 497 patients concluded that there were no significant differences in patient outcomes between discectomy and nonsurgical care for symptomatic LDH at 1 year.24,25 Interpretation of the RCT was limited by a small sample size, large rate of crossover (40%) in the ITT analysis, and a lack of as-treated analysis.24 In the cohort study, patients treated with discectomy and nonsurgical care experienced a similar, nonsignificant (P = .58) improvement in the primary outcome (ie, NASS neurogenic symptoms score) after adjusting for covariates.25 However, the discectomy group achieved significantly greater improvements in the pain and disability scores as well as the mental component summary of the SF-36 (P < .05), even after adjustment for covariates.25
A 2019 systematic review and meta-analysis examined 11 studies (3232 patients) comparing discectomy versus nonsurgical care.34 Discectomy was found to be more effective than nonsurgical care in significantly reducing leg pain (P < .001) and back pain (P = .02). The authors also reported a trend towards greater reductions in disability after discectomy, but the comparison was not statistically significant (P = .09). Comparison of any surgical intervention with nonsurgical care can be challenging and such studies require careful interpretation (eg, ITT versus as-treated analyses with adjustment for covariates). While studies of discectomy versus nonsurgical care can be confounded by high crossover rates and expectation bias,35 the as-treated analyses consistently observed a significant benefit of surgery among indicated patients.
Comparisons of discectomy with an active control may help limit expectation bias and crossover rates. Accordingly, a Cochrane Systematic Review of RCTs on surgical interventions for LDH also compared discectomy with chemonucleolysis.36 Meta-analyses in the Cochrane Review demonstrated strong evidence for superiority of chemonucleolysis over placebo as well as strong evidence for the superiority of discectomy over chemonucleolysis, which also suggests that discectomy is more effective than placebo.36
Endoscopic Versus Open Discectomy
Endoscopic discectomy is a minimally invasive technique designed to reduce tissue trauma compared to open discectomy.37,38 As with an open procedure, an endoscopic approach allows for full access to the herniated disc under direct visualization using an endoscope. Advantages of endoscopic compared to open discectomy include reduced incision size and soft tissue damage, which may be associated with faster recovery.39 The transforaminal endoscopic approach obviates the need for removal of laminar bone and ligamentum flavum, resulting in less alteration of the anatomy. Disadvantages include an unfamiliar approach to most surgeons and a learning curve, making this approach technically challenging for many surgeons.40
Clinical studies and meta-analyses have shown that patients treated with endoscopic discectomy experience similar improvements in function and symptom relief when compared to traditional open discectomy or microdiscectomy.38,41–45 Ruetten et al38 performed a seminal 200-patient RCT, with randomization to either conventional microdiscectomy (n = 100) or full-endoscopic discectomy (transforaminal, n = 41; interlaminar, n = 59). There were no serious complications in either group, but the microdiscectomy group had a significantly higher rate of nonserious complications, such as postoperative bleeding or delayed wound healing (P < .05). Recurrent herniation rates were also similar between the groups, but the rate of recurrence was significantly higher among patients who had a large versus small annular defect, regardless of treatment type (P < .01). Clinical outcomes, such as leg pain and disability scores, were significantly improved in both groups through 2 years follow up (89% follow-up rate), with no significant differences between groups. However, the endoscopic group reported significantly less postoperative pain, less pain medication use, and fewer postoperative work disability days (25 days versus 49 days) than the microdiscectomy group (P < .01).
Gibson et al42 performed a prospective RCT comparing 70 patients treated with transforaminal endoscopic discectomy (TED) versus 70 patients treated with microdiscectomy and observed similar outcomes for improvements in pain and disability between the 2 groups. However, patients in the TED group had a shorter mean hospital stay (0.7 versus 1.4 nights; P < .001), suggesting a faster recovery time. Zhang et al45 reported results from a systematic review of 9 studies (1527 patients) comparing microdiscectomy with TED. Results from the meta-analysis suggested that there were no significant differences in visual analog scale (VAS) leg pain, recovery of function following surgery, operative time, or incidence of complications. Similar to the study by Gibson et al, endoscopic discectomy significantly reduced the length of hospital stay (P < .001).
Prevention of Recurrent LDH
Although primary discectomy is an effective treatment for LDH with radiculopathy, a small proportion of patients (5%–15%) experience symptomatic recurrent LDH (rLDH),19,46,47 and 4% to 6% undergo revision surgery within 2 years.48–50 Techniques for management of recurrent herniation are dependent upon the specific patient indications and the surgeon's experience, on a case-by-case basis. Regardless of the reoperation strategy, clinical evidence has shown that patients who undergo revision surgery for symptomatic rLDH have worse clinical outcomes (eg, pain and disability) compared to patients who do not reherniate following primary discectomy.51–57 Abdu et al52 observed that 9.1% of the 810 SPORT patients treated with discectomy experienced rLDH and revision surgery during the 8-year follow-up period. Compared to patients that did not reherniate, those with rLDH and revision surgery had significantly worse SF-36 bodily pain, ODI, and sciatica bothersomeness scores at 4 years follow up (P ≤ .001 for all metrics). Similarly, a study of patient-reported outcomes from a large registry (Swespine) demonstrated that patients who underwent revision surgery for rLDH experienced significantly less improvement in VAS leg pain, VAS back pain, ODI, and EQ-5D health status compared to the primary LDH group (P ≤ .001 for all metrics).53
Patient factors that may increase the risk of rLDH include younger age, male gender, work that requires lifting, worse baseline pain and disability, lack of motor or sensory deficit, smoking, and diabetes.46,52,58 An important risk factor for symptomatic rLDH that may be addressable by the surgeon is a large annular defect (≥6 mm wide). A recent (2018) meta-analysis reported that a large annular defect increases the odds of a patient experiencing symptom recurrence or revision surgery by a factor of 2.5 or 2.3, respectively.20 There is an unmet medical need to address this elevated risk in patients with large annular defects and avoid the worse outcomes associated with revision.59 Several devices have been designed to help repair large annular defects, including soft tissue suture kits and bone-anchored annular closure devices (ACDs). While discectomy is intended to alleviate patient symptoms by decompressing the impinged neural structures, annular repair is intended to reduce the risk of recurrence and revision, thereby sustaining the clinical benefits of the primary discectomy.
Currently, clinical evidence exists for 2 annular repair methods: (1) closure of the annular defect using a soft tissue suture kit and (2) implantation of a bone-anchored ACD. Bailey et al60 described a 750-patient RCT to study annular repair using a soft tissue suture system that was commercially available at the time of the study. Patients were randomized 2:1 to annular repair or no annular repair (control) after discectomy. Included subjects were candidates for 1- or 2-level lumbar discectomy, had persistent and predominant leg pain (VAS leg > 4/10), and were not responsive to 6 weeks of nonsurgical care. No inclusion or exclusion criteria specified the size of the annular defect. The authors reported that annulotomy was performed in 77% of patients, producing annular defects with a mean size of 4.75 ± 2.0 mm. Assuming a normal distribution, 73% of annulotomy patients had a defect size less than 6 mm, which is commonly described as the threshold for “large” defects.20,59 There were no significant differences in rates of adverse events or serious adverse events (SAEs) between the 2 groups. Clinical outcomes of leg pain, back pain, disability, and physical function were also similar between the groups over 2 years of follow up. While there was a trend of reduced rLDH-related reoperations over 2 years in the annular repair group, the results were not statistically significant (9.7% versus 11.2%; P = .56). The marginal reductions in reoperation rate may have been related to the fact that most patients did not have a large annular defect. In the subgroup with predominant leg pain, the rate of rLDH-related reoperations was significantly reduced in the annular repair group at 3 months (1.0% versus 5.9%; P = .019) and 6 months (2.0% versus 6.9%; P = .046) follow up, but not at 2 years (6.7% versus 12.1%; P = .13).
Several clinical studies, including 2 RCTs and a prospective comparative cohort study,61–63 have shown that bone-anchored ACD implantation reduces the risk of symptomatic rLDH and reoperation compared with discectomy alone (Table 2). Four additional prospective cohort or registry studies have also observed positive outcomes and low revision rates with this treatment technique.64–68 One multicenter RCT analyzed 550 patients with large (≥6 mm wide) annular defects who were randomized 1:1 to treatment with discectomy alone (n = 278) or discectomy plus a bone-anchored ACD (n = 272).62,69 The ACD group experienced a significantly lower rate of symptomatic rLDH (12% versus 25%; P < .001) and related revision surgeries (5% versus 13%; P = .001) compared to discectomy alone over 2 years of follow up.62 At 3 and 4 years follow up, the ACD group also experienced significantly greater improvement in pain, disability, and health-related quality of life scores compared to discectomy alone (P < .05).70,71 Based on Kaplan-Meier survival analysis, the incidence rates continued to be lower in the ACD group over a 5 year follow up for symptomatic index-level rLDH (21.8% versus 32.8%; P < .001) and index-level reoperation (16.2% versus 22.7%; P = .03).72
According to the FDA's Summary of Safety and Effectiveness Data (SSED) related to this device and RCT, there were 34 (12.7%) device deficiencies comprised of 5 anchor migrations and 29 events related to the occlusion component.72 Approximately half of the deficiencies were asymptomatic, and 12 (4.5%) of those deficiencies were related to a SAE. Despite these device-related complications, the ACD group experienced significantly fewer device- or procedure-related SAEs over a 5-year time period (P = .037) due to the reduction in symptomatic rLDH rates.72 The SSED also described the observation of radiographic endplate lesions (EPLs) on CT images at a significantly higher rate in the ACD group (89% versus 41%; P < .001). However, the size of 90% of the EPLs in both groups stabilized over the 3- to 5-year observation period. Further, in the ACD group, no negative clinical outcomes were associated with the EPLs, based on patient-reported outcomes, reoperations, or SAEs. Current evidence suggests that the EPLs do not impact device function or clinical outcomes at 5 years follow up, and an ongoing study will continue to monitor safety.72
Cho et al63 reported the results from a separate 60-patient RCT, where 30 patients received discectomy and 30 received discectomy plus a bone-anchored ACD. By 2 years, the ACD group had a significantly lower rate of rLDH (3.3% versus 20%; P = .04) compared to discectomy alone. Disc height was also better maintained at 2 years follow up in the bone-anchored ACD group compared to control (86.3% versus 79.2%; P = .04). Both groups experienced significant improvements in all patient-reported outcomes related to leg and back pain, ODI, and quality of life (P < .001). The authors reported that no complications, including device migration or loosening, were observed in any patients within the 2 years of follow up.63
In addition to the 2 RCTs, 4 prospective cohort studies and 1 retrospective analysis of a real-world treatment registry were identified (513 patients total).61,64,66–68 Each of these studies described positive treatment results with a bone-anchored ACD, with rLDH rates ranging from 0% to 3.5% and reoperation rates ranging from 0 to 7.3% over a 1- to 5-year follow-up period. Device-related adverse events occurred at similar rates to the RCT (2%–8.8%). The current evidence for bone-anchored annular closure is derived from 7 unique studies and 1123 patients (ACD: n = 743; control: n = 380). Collectively, this evidence indicates a positive benefit-risk ratio for lumbar discectomy patients with large annular defects, based on significant reductions in symptomatic rLDH and revision surgery in an at-risk population.
Cost Effectiveness
In addition to the clinical benefits, primary discectomy has been shown to be cost effective relative to nonsurgical care. A 1996 study found that discectomy increases quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) by 0.43 over 10 years at a nondiscounted cost of $29 200 per QALY.73 More recent (2008 and 2011) studies from Tosteson et al74,75 reported that the costs for discectomy per QALY ranged from $34 355 to $69 403 over 2 years follow up and $20 600 per QALY through 4 years. Furthermore, data from the National Health Interview Survey show that patients treated with discectomy return to work faster, miss fewer workdays, have increased average earnings, and the increased earnings offset the cost of surgery.76 When also considering the effects on employee productivity, surgical discectomy may yield a net societal cost savings.76
Compelling evidence has shown that primary discectomy is a safe and effective treatment for indicated patients, yet a minority of patients experience recurring symptoms, and some undergo revision surgery. Reoperation adds over $44 000 per patient in direct health care costs over 4 years following discectomy.77 With approximately 500 000 discectomies per year in the United States,78 it is important from both economic and socioeconomic standpoints to identify evidence-based treatment strategies that help reduce the burden associated with revision surgeries after discectomy.
Among at-risk patients with large annular defects, we estimate there could be 24 000 reoperations over any 2-year period in the United States, which are associated with a substantial economic and societal impact (Figure 1). Annular repair has reduced the rLDH-related reoperation rate by over 60% in a 2-year time period,62 which should reduce the direct health care costs, allow more patients to return to work and stay at work, and avoid the significant morbidity associated with reoperation. Based on RCT data, a bone-anchored ACD was found to be cost effective at $6030 per QALY over 2 years of follow up, which is well below the standard willingness-to-pay thresholds.79 When the societal costs of missed work and lower productivity were also considered, the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of the bone-anchored ACD became negative, which indicates “economic dominance”—improved outcomes at a lower cost—compared to discectomy alone.79
COVERAGE RATIONALE
Nonsurgical management is generally the first line of treatment for patients with LDH and radiculopathy. For patients with symptomatic LDH that fail to improve after 6 weeks of nonsurgical care or have severe symptoms that necessitate earlier intervention, large bodies of evidence indicate that discectomy is medically necessary and provides superior outcomes compared to continuing nonsurgical care. Each discectomy approach (open, microtubular, or endoscopic) has demonstrated similar clinical benefits and is appropriate for the surgical treatment of LDH with radiculopathy. The current high-level clinical evidence supports discectomy (open, microtubular, or endoscopic discectomy) as a medically necessary procedure for the treatment of LDH with radiculopathy in indicated patients.
In patients undergoing primary discectomy with a large (≥6 mm wide) annular defect, annular repair or closure is intended to control the risk of recurring symptoms and reoperation. Currently, the only annular repair technique supported by high-level clinical evidence is bone-anchored annular closure. A bone-anchored ACD is FDA-approved and indicated for patients with large annular defects. Adequate evidence is currently not available to support suturing of the annulus as an effective repair technique. The current clinical evidence supports bone-anchored annular closure for indicated patients to improve the probability of avoiding rLDH and sustaining the treatment benefits of discectomy.
INDICATIONS/LIMITATIONS OF COVERAGE
Patients who have the following clinical indications may be eligible for discectomy and coverage:
Clinical signs and symptoms associated with LDH,
Imaging confirmation of LDH consistent with clinical findings,
Failure to improve after 6 weeks of conservative care.
Clinical indications for annular closure and coverage include (based on the FDA-approved indications):
Patient is indicated for a primary discectomy due to a posterior or posterolateral herniation,
Discectomy will be performed at a single level that includes L4–L5 or L5–S1,
The annular defect is large (between 4 and 6 mm tall and between 6 and 10 mm wide) after completion of the discectomy procedure.
CODING
Procedural (Current Procedural Terminology [CPT]) Coding
The American Medical Association recommends that posterior-posterolateral and/or revision lumbar discectomy be coded using CPT that are listed below. For purposes of CPT coding, the primary approach and visualization define the service. Unless otherwise specified, lumbar discectomy is presumed open (which includes microtubular approach).
Definitions
Direct Visualization
Light-based visualization can (only) be performed by eye or with surgical loupes, microscope, or endoscope.
Open
Spinal procedures with continuous direct (light-based) visualization of the spine through a surgical opening.
Endoscopic
Spinal procedures performed with continuous direct (light-based) visualization of the spine through a surgical opening.
CPT Codes
63030
Laminotomy (hemilaminectomy) with decompression of nerve root(s), including partial facetectomy, foraminotomy, and/or excision of herniated intervertebral disc; 1 interspace, lumbar (for bilateral procedure, report 63030 with modifier 50).
63035
Each additional interspace, lumbar (use 63035 in conjunction with 63030). (For bilateral procedure, report 63035 with modifier 50.)
63042
Laminotomy (hemilaminectomy) with decompression of nerve root(s), including partial facectomy, foraminotomy, and/or excision of herniated intervertebral, reexploration, single interspace, lumbar (for bilateral procedure, report 63042 with modifier 50).
63044
Each additional lumbar interspace (list separately in addition to code for primary procedure; use 63044 in conjunction with 63042).
63056
Transpedicular approach with decompression of spinal cord, equina, and/or nerve root(s) single segment; lumbar (including transfacet, or lateral extraforaminal approach; eg, far lateral herniated intervertebral disc).
63057
Each additional segment, lumbar (list separately in addition to code for primary procedure; use 63057 in conjunction with 63056).
62380
Endoscopic decompression of spinal cord, nerve root(s), including laminotomy, partial facectomy, foraminotomy, discectomy, and/or excision of herniated intervertebral disc, 1 interspace, lumbar (for bilateral procedure, report 62380 with modifier 50; effective date: January 2017).
22899
Unlisted procedure, spine. Physicians may report CPT 22899 for implantation of the bone-anchored ACD in addition to the appropriate CPT code for the discectomy procedure (eg, 63030).
Diagnostic (International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, Clinical Modification [ICD10-CM]) Coding (diagnosis codes are listed in Table 3)
Hospital Outpatient-Ambulatory Surgical Center (ASC) Coding
Medicare created a new Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) code that specifically includes a bone-anchored ACD that hospital outpatient departments and ASCs should report for the procedure:
C9757
Laminotomy (hemilaminectomy), with decompression of nerve root(s), including partial facetectomy, foraminotomy and excision of herniated intervertebral disc, and repair of annular defect with implantation of bone anchored ACD, including annular defect measurement, alignment and sizing assessment, and image guidance; 1 interspace, lumbar (effective date: January 2020).
DOCUMENTATION REQUIREMENTS
(1) Radiculopathy confirmed on history and physical examination,
AND
(2) EITHER
Disabling leg or back pain refractory to 6 weeks of conservative care including any 1 of the following: time, physician structured exercise regimen, lumbar epidural therapy, or physical/chiropractic therapy,
OR
Progressive neurologic deficit,
AND
(3) Level appropriate documentation of nerve root compression on imaging (MRI or CT, preferably with Myelogram) and/or nerve conduction velocity/electromyogram.
CONCLUSIONS
Discectomy is a safe and effective procedure for patients with primary LDH and radiculopathy who do not respond to nonsurgical care or have severe and deteriorating symptoms. The current evidence is consistently in favor of discectomy, rather than continuing nonsurgical care, for greater and/or faster alleviation of pain, reduction of disability, and higher patient satisfaction. Clinical evidence indicates that microtubular discectomy and endoscopic discectomy result in reduced incision size, soft tissue damage, and hospital stay and yield similar improvements in symptoms compared to open discectomy. Currently, evidence-based clinical recommendations for annular repair after discectomy do not exist. Patients who are indicated for discectomy and have a large annular defect are exposed to a greater risk of symptom recurrence and revision surgery and may benefit from annular repair. Current level 1 evidence demonstrates that, in appropriately selected patient populations, implantation of a bone-anchored ACD reduces the risk of symptom recurrence and revision surgery compared to discectomy alone. The current evidence supports the use of discectomy as well as consideration for bone-anchored annular repair for the treatment of indicated patients with primary symptomatic LDH who may otherwise be at higher risk for recurrent disc herniation. (This ISASS Policy addresses only LDH with radiculopathy that is clinically appropriate for direct visualization [open, microtubular, or endoscopic discectomy]; the particular primary posterior/posterolateral surgical procedural approach is the purview of the surgeon.)
Footnotes
Disclosures and COI: JI: salaried employee of Telos Partners, LLC, which received payments from ISASS to support literature review and manuscript development. Telos Partners, LLC, has received fees unrelated to this manuscript from entities in the spine space, including Zimmer Biomet, Orthopediatrics, Intrinsic Therapeutics, K2M, Medacta International, Merit Medical, Wenzel Spine, and SiNtx Technologies. CWK: Consultant for Elliquence, paid member of Mock FDA Advisory Panel for Intrinsic Therapeutics. AA: Consulting fees from Intrinsic Therapeutics. JY: Consultant for Elliquence Spine, Vertical Spine, Aesculap Spine. ML: None.
- ©International Society for the Advancement of Spine Surgery
- This manuscript is generously published free of charge by ISASS, the International Society for the Advancement of Spine Surgery. Copyright © 2020 ISASS.
REFERENCES
- 1 .↵
- 2 .↵
- 3 .↵
- 4 .↵
- 5 .↵
- 6 .↵
- 7 .↵
- 8 .↵
- 9 .↵
- 10 .↵
- 11 .↵
- 12 .↵
- 13 .↵
- 14 .↵
- 15 .↵
- 16 .↵
- 17 .↵
- 18 .↵
- 19 .↵
- 20 .↵
- 21 .↵
- 22 .↵
- 23 .↵
- 24 .↵
- 25 .↵
- 26 .↵
- 27 .↵
- 28 .↵
- 29 .↵
- 30 .↵
- 31 .↵
- 32 .
- 33 .↵
- 34 .↵
- 35 .↵
- 36 .↵
- 37 .↵
- 38 .↵
- 39 .↵
- 40 .↵
- 41 .↵
- 42 .↵
- 43 .
- 44 .
- 45 .↵
- 46 .↵
- 47 .↵
- 48 .↵
- 49 .
- 50 .↵
- 51 .↵
- 52 .↵
- 53 .↵
- 54 .
- 55 .
- 56 .
- 57 .↵
- 58 .↵
- 59 .↵
- 60 .↵
- 61 .↵
- 62 .↵
- 63 .↵
- 64 .↵
- 65 .
- 66 .↵
- 67 .
- 68 .↵
- 69 .↵
- 70 .↵
- 71 .↵
- 72 .↵
- 73 .↵
- 74 .↵
- 75 .↵
- 76 .↵
- 77 .↵
- 78 .↵
- 79 .↵