Older DCM โคPatientsโข Face Higher risk of Limited Neurological Recovery After Surgery,Japanese Study Finds
TOKYO – A new multi-institutionalโ study from Japan indicates that advanced age is a important,independent predictor โคof limited neurological improvementโ followingโค posterior decompression surgery for degenerative cervical myelopathy (DCM),a condition impacting โขthe spinal โcord in the neck. The findings, โpublished recently, offer crucial insight for patient counseling and surgicalโ planning.
DCM, โcaused by age-related wear and tear on the cervical โขspine, compresses the spinal cord and can lead to โฃa range of debilitating symptoms including weakness, numbness, and difficulty with coordination. While posterior decompression surgeryโ aims to relieve this pressure, outcomes vary considerably.This research, โฃinvolving 868 patients across 17 Japanese institutions, sought to pinpoint factors associated with lessโ favorableโ results, aโข critical step toward optimizing careโค for those โคaffected. Approximately 80,000 people are diagnosed with DCM annually in the United States alone, and asโค the population ages,โฃ understanding predictors of surgicalโ success becomes increasingly vital. Identifying patients atโฃ higher risk of limitedโฃ recovery allows forโ more realistic expectations and potentially option or adjunctive treatment strategies.
researchers categorized patients into three groups – fair, moderate, and good – based โคon โคtheir Japanese orthopedic association (JOA) recovery โขrate following โsurgery. Patients were followed for โคover โฃone year.The fair group exhibited a recovery rate โbelow 22.2% (averaging 6.2% ยฑ 13.7%),the moderate group ranged from 22.3% to โฃ77.1% (50.1% ยฑ 15.0%), and theโค good groupโฃ exceeded 77.2%โ (90.6% ยฑ 8.3%).โ
Initial analysis โขrevealed a statistically significant difference in the โขprevalence of diabetesโฃ mellitus acrossโ the threeโ groups (26.4% in the fair group, 23.0% in the moderate group, โand 14.1% in the good group;โ pโ = 0.03). However, after employing โคmultinominal logistic regression, old ageโ emerged as theโ sole significant independent predictor of poorer outcomes. Specifically,patients in the fair outcome group were 1.62 times more likely to be older compared to those in the good outcome groupโ (95% confidence interval: 1.27-2.07; p <โค 0.01). Similarly, โคolder patients were โ1.35 โtimes more likely to fall into the โfair outcome group compared โto the moderateโข outcome group (95% confidence interval: 1.15-1.59; p <โ 0.01). The study concludes that โadvancedโค ageโฃ may independently contributeโข to a failure of neurological improvement afterโฃ posterior decompression surgeryโ for DCM. Further research is neededโ toโ exploreโ the underlying mechanisms driving thisโค association and โto develop strategies โคto mitigate โคthe impact of age on surgical outcomes.