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Choosing an Interbody Cage Steven R. Garfin, MD Distinguished - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Choosing an Interbody Cage Steven R. Garfin, MD Distinguished Professor and Chair Department of Orthopaedic Surgery UC San Diego Disclosures Magnifi Group AO Spine Medtronic Benvenue Medical NuVasive, Inc. EBI SI


  1. Choosing an Interbody Cage Steven R. Garfin, MD Distinguished Professor and Chair Department of Orthopaedic Surgery UC San Diego

  2. Disclosures • Magnifi Group • AO Spine • Medtronic • Benvenue Medical • NuVasive, Inc. • EBI • SI Bone, Inc. • Globus Medical • Spinal Kinetics • Intrinsic Therapeutics • Vertiflex • Johnson & Johnson, DePuy Spine

  3. How to choose an interbody graft? • ALIF • TLIF • PLIF What are the goals of surgery?? • LLIF • Expandable

  4. Interbody Fusion • Helps stabilize anterior column / motion segment • Enhances fusion rate • Improvement in sagittal and coronal alignment • Restoration/improvement in disc height • Allows for indirect decompression of foraminal stenosis by increasing disc/foraminal site

  5. Interbody Indications • Risk factors for non-union – Smoking, obesity, diabetes, etc. • Dynamic, (symptomatic), instability • Failed posterior fusion • Deformity Correction

  6. Anterior Lumbar Interbody Fusion • Fusion for discogenic back pain • Particularly L5-S1 DDD, maybe L4-5 • Allows direct midline view for endplate prep disc space Allows large implant size and surface area  • anatomical correction and fusion success • Failed interbody fusion (LLIF, TLIF, TLIF) • Complications include: – Vascular and visceral injury – Retrograde ejaculation – Difficulty accessing disc space / mobilizing vessels (and have to abandon)

  7. ALIF Cages • Tricortical iliac crest graft • Ring allografts • PEEK • PEEK + Vertebral body screws/”wings” • Titanium – Polished – Plasma spray – 3D modeling with large/small pores

  8. Transforaminal Lumbar Interbody Fusion TLIF is pedicle based approach  requires facetectomy, partial lami, and • some dural retraction PLIF requires + neural retraction (not needed with TLIF)  nerve root • injury, dural tears and some epidural fibrosis • TLIF can preserve midline structures (intra/supraspinous ligaments) • Direct decompression • Smaller footprint than with other cages • May achieve less lordosis than LLIF/ALIF • ? Safety at higher lumbar levels ?

  9. Lateral Lumbar Interbody Fusion (To me - the Work Horse) • Indirect decompression • Large footprint • Endplate to endplate support (more than others) • Common complications – Anterior thigh dysesthesias/weakness in 20- 30% – Inability to access disc space (nerve root)

  10. LLIF Limitations • Anatomy – psoas, iliac crest, lumbar plexus • Large, central HNP can be difficult to address • Learning curve • L5-S1 • Sometimes L4-5 spondy Incidence of thigh pain by year

  11. LLIF Advantages & Results: Indirect Decompression • Reduction of Vertebral bodies utilizing ligamentotaxis of ALL and PLL • Central and Foraminal Decompression

  12. • Radiographic assessment of LLIF ability to indirectly decompress neural elements • 42% average disc height increase • 13.5% foraminal height increase • 25% foraminal area increase • 33% central canal area increase • Indirect decompression limited if there is congenital stenosis or cage subsidence

  13. Graft Subsidence is a Concern Euro Spine 2015 • 24 disc spaces (48 endplates) • 6 disc spaces for each procedure – ALIF, PLIF, TLIF and XLIF • ALIF -- least amount of relative endplate prep (35% of disc space) • TLIF -- endplate damage highest (48% of specimens) • XLIF -- greatest endplate preparation (60%of disc space) with least damage

  14. • Placement of large cage across apophyseal rings (cortical bone) ALI F Dimensions 21-24mm AP 32-36mm wide Lateral Access Cages Dimensions 18-22mm AP 45-60mm wide PLI F/ TLI F Dimensions 25-35mm AP 10-12mm wide

  15. Lower Subsidence Rates with LLIF vs PLIF/TLIF ≥30% endplate cage coverage = decreased subsidence TLIF / PLIF LLIF (22mm) 22% Subsidence 7 2% Subsidence 8 Vaidya R, Sethi A, Bartol S, Jacobson M, Coe C, Le TV, Baaj AA, Dakwar E, Burkett CJ, Murray G, Craig JG. Complications in the use of rhBMP-2 in Smith DA et al. Subsidence of PEEK cages for interbody spinal fusions. J Spinal polyetheretherketone intervertebral cages in Disord Tech 2008;21:557-62. minimally invasive lateral retroperitoneal transpsoas lumbar interbody fusion. Spine 2012;37:1268-73. Uribe et. al., 2012

  16. Spine 2017

  17. • Randomized cadaveric study of 40 lumbar vertebras • 4 groups • (A) Endplate decortication with short cage Short cage does not extend across apophyseal ring • (B) Endplate decortication with long cage Long cage spanning apophyseal ring

  18. • Long cages spanning endplates provides more strength in compression with less subsidence • Spanning ring apophysis increases load to failure by 40% with intact endplates and 30% with decorticated endplates • Good endplate prep and longer cages paramount in osteoporotic patients to decrease subsidence

  19. How do the different grafts affect lordosis? International Journal of Spine Surgery, 2016

  20. • Retrospective, comparative radiographic analysis of LLIF, ALIF and TLIF • Compared standing pre- and 6wks post op x-rays • Looked at segmental lordosis at operative level and regional lordosis (L1-S1) and anterior and posterior disc heights • 121 pts  176 levels – LLIF – 35pts, 54 levels – ALIF – 36 pts, 57 levels – TLIF – 50 pts, 65 levels

  21. ALIF results in the greatest single level lordosis change – but not statistically significant compared to LLIF/TLIF

  22. Coronal and Sagittal Plane alignment after LLIF Acosta et al Lee, Kim, et al Significantly ↑↑ coronal alignment: segmental, regional, and globally ↑↑ regional lordosis/global sagittal alignment with OPEN techniques (not necessarily with Percutaneous or MIS techniques Significantly more segmental and regional lordosis of L- spine when osteotomies are performed

  23. Deformity Correction using LLIF International Spine Study Group JNSurg 2016 • Best Group: -significantly less post-op SVA ( 3.4 vs 6.9 cm, p = 0.043) -significantly less post-op PI-LL mismatch than the worst group. ( 10.4° vs 19.4°, p = 0.027)

  24. LLIF in Adult Degenerative Scoliosis Phillips, Isaacs, et al. Spine 2010 • 24 month f/u prospective study • In hypolordosis pts: LL 28°  34° at 24 months (P < 0.001). • Overall Cobb angle corrected 21°  15°,

  25. Akbarnia et al (IMAST, 2010) • 2 yr f/u, • Ave cobb: 47°  17° • ↑↑ in SRS-22, VAS & ODI • Coronal L4 tilt: 23 °  10 ° • 45% coronal correction w lateral IB alone 70% w posterior instrumentation

  26. Implant Materials • PEEK – Modulus close to bone – Radiolucent – Hydrophobic polymer – Does not allow for cell adhesion – Good x-rays/MRI • Titanium – Modulus higher than bone • Stress shielding, altered load – Surface allows for bone on- growth (particularly porous coated) • Enhanced cell adhesion – Some artifact on MRI

  27. Pelletier, Punjabi, et al. JSD 2013 Comparison of in vitro and in vivo biomechanics, fusion and bone apposition of PEEK and Ti at 26 weeks • 2 level ALIF performed in 9 sheep  performed initial biomechanical studies to establish initial stability of graft • At 26wks – no difference in the amount of fusion mass (sheep sacrificed)

  28. Peek Ti • Ti/plasma coated = 42% of implant surface had bone contact • PEEK = 12% of implant surface had bone contact

  29. J. Clin Neuro No statistical difference in fusion rates btw PEEK vs titanium Titanium has higher incidence of graft subsidence

  30. Expandable Cages • Original designs – Fill cage with graft material – After expansion what happens to graft • Spreads up with expansion (leaving gap in middle) • Stays put (leaving gap at ends) – New designs • Fill cage after expansion • Fill around cage

  31. My Preference for Technique • ALIF – L5-S1 – L4-5 only when also doing L5-S1 – Revision • XLIF – Thoracic to L4-5, if anatomy permits • TLIF – Lower lumbar (L3-4, L4-5 or L5-S1), if not able to get there via XLIF or ALIF • Expandable Cages – For MIS post-lat/lateral corpectomies

  32. Conclusions • End plate preparation is key!! – Technology doesn’t make up for good surgical technique • Which interbody technique best? – Each has its own unique complications/advantages – Get some correction of sagittal alignment with each method • What do you need to achieve? – Alignment – Fusion – Both • What device/approach? Opportunity for studies

  33. Thank Thank You You

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