Evid Based Spine Care J 2013; 04(02): 078-089
DOI: 10.1055/s-0033-1357359
Original Research
Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

A Comparison of Radiostereometric Analysis and Computed Tomography for the Assessment of Lumbar Spinal Fusion in a Sheep Model

Ali Humadi
1   Department of Spinal Surgery, Royal Adelaide Hospital, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia
,
Brian J. C. Freeman
1   Department of Spinal Surgery, Royal Adelaide Hospital, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia
,
Rob J. Moore
2   Adelaide Centre for Spinal Research, SA Pathology, Adelaide, Australia
,
Stuart Callary
3   Department of Orthopaedics, Royal Adelaide Hospital, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia
,
Klas Halldin
4   Department of Orthopaedics, Spinal Unit, Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Gothenburg, Sweden
,
Vikram David
5   Department of Orthopaedics, Bendigo Hospital, Victoria, Australia
,
William Maclaurin
6   Department of Radiology, The Alfred Health, Victoria, Australia
,
Paul Tauro
7   Department of Radiology, Northern Health, Victoria, Australia
,
Mark Schoenwaelder
6   Department of Radiology, The Alfred Health, Victoria, Australia
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Weitere Informationen

Publikationsverlauf

01. April 2013

18. Juli 2013

Publikationsdatum:
21. November 2013 (online)

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Abstract

Study Design Prospective animal study.

Objective The aim of this animal study is to evaluate the accuracy of radiostereometric analysis (RSA) compared with computed tomographic (CT) scan in the assessment of spinal fusion after anterior lumbar interbody fusion (ALIF) using histology as a gold standard.

Methods Three non-adjacent ALIFs (L1–L2, L3–L4, and L5–L6) were performed in nine sheep. The sheep were divided into three groups of three sheep. All the animals were humanely killed immediately after having the last scheduled RSA. The lumbar spine was removed and in vitro fine cut CT and histopathology were performed.

Results Using histological assessment as the gold standard for assessing fusion, RSA demonstrated better results (100% sensitivity and 66.7% specificity; positive predictive value [PPV] = 27.3%, negative predictive value [NPV] =100.0%) compared with CT (66.7% sensitivity and 60.0% specificity [PPV = 16.7%, NPV = 93.8%]).

Conclusions RSA demonstrated higher sensitivity and specificity when compared with CT. Furthermore, RSA has the advantage of much lower radiation exposure compared with fine cut CT. Further studies are required to see if RSA remains superior to CT scan for the assessment spinal fusion in the clinical setting.

Assessment of Class of Evidence (CoE) for individual studies of diagnostic test evaluation

Methodological principle

Study design

 Prospective cohort design

X

 Retrospective cohort design

 Case–control design

Broad spectrum of patients with expected condition

a

Appropriate reference standard used

X

Adequate description of test and reference for replication

X

Blinded comparison with appropriate reference

X

Reference standard performed independently of test

X

Evidence level

II

Note: Blank box indicates criterion not met, could not be determined, or information not reported by author or was not reported.

aThis study contained nine animal subjects.

Supplementary Material