Recurrence of Pain after Usual Non-Operative Care for Symptomatic Lumbar Disc Herniation: Analysis of Data from the Spine Patient Outcomes Research Trial

PM R. 2015 Nov 5. pii: S1934-1482(15)01103-X. doi: 10.1016/j.pmrj.2015.10.016. [Epub ahead of print]
Suri P, Pearson AM, Scherer EA, Zhao W, Lurie JD, Morgan TS, Weinstein JN.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE:

To determine risks and predictors of recurrent leg and low back pain (LBP) following unstructured, usual non-operative care for subacute/chronic symptomatic lumbar disc herniation (LDH).

DESIGN:

Secondary analysis of data from a concurrent randomized trial and observational cohort study.

SETTING:

13outpatientspinepractices. Participants- 199 participants with leg pain resolution and 142 participants with LBP resolution, from among 478 participants receiving usual non-operative care for symptomatic LDH.

ASSESSMENT OF RISK FACTORS:

Potential predictors of recurrence included time to initial symptom resolution, sociodemographics, clinical characteristics, work-related factors, imaging-detected herniation characteristics, and baseline pain bothersomeness.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS:

Leg pain and LBP bothersomeness were assessed using a 0 to 6 numerical scale at up to 4 years of follow-up. For individuals with initial resolution of leg pain, we defined recurrent leg pain as having leg pain, receiving lumbar epidural steroid injections, or undergoing lumbar surgery subsequent to initial leg pain resolution. We calculated cumulative risks of recurrence using Kaplan-Meier survival plots, and examined predictors of recurrence using Cox proportional hazards models. We used similar definitions for LBP recurrence.

RESULTS:

1- and 3-year cumulative recurrence risks were 23% and 51% for leg pain, and 28% and 70% for LBP, respectively. Early leg pain resolution did not predict future leg pain recurrence. Complete leg pain resolution (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 0.47, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.31-0.72]) and posterolateral herniation location (aHR 0.61 [95% CI 0.39-0.97]) predicted a lower risk of leg pain recurrence, and joint problems (aHR 1.89 [95% CI 1.16-3.05]) and smoking (aHR 1.81 [95% CI 1.07-3.05]) predicted a greater risk of leg pain recurrence. For participants with complete initial resolution of pain, recurrence risks at 1- and 3-years were 16% and 41% for leg pain, and 24% and 59% for LBP, respectively.

CONCLUSIONS:

Recurrence of pain is common after unstructured, usual nonsurgical care for LDH. These risk estimates depend on the specific definitions applied, and the predictors identified require replication in future studies.

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