EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE ON APRIL 28, 9:30 A.M. CST
CHICAGO (April 28, 2008) - Every year, nearly 12,000 individuals
in the United States and Canada, mostly young adults, sustain a spinal cord
injury (SCI). According to the Centers for Diseases Control and Prevention
(CDC), SCI costs an estimated $9.7 billion each year in the United States alone.
Although there are some surgical interventions, such as decompression, which
neurosurgeons administer to SCI patients after injury, these procedures have
not dramatically improved overall recovery and outcome. “This is an area
of medicine that has not seen tremendous scientific advances, so there remains
an urgent need to improve upon current interventions to help restore neurological
function in patients with acute SCI,” said Michael Fehlings, MD, PhD,
FRCSC, FACS, head of the Krembil Neuroscience Center at the University Health
Network in Toronto and professor of Neurosurgery at the University of Toronto.
Surgical decompression of the spinal cord is often done after an injury occurs,
although the timing of this intervention varies widely. Surgery involves the
removal of various tissue or bone fragments that are compressing and comprising
the spinal cord. Depending on the unique circumstances of the injury, decompression
is accomplished through a variety of surgical approaches, including, for example,
approaching the compressed cord from either the front (anterior) or back (posterior).
The role and timing of decompression in patients with SCI is controversial.
Despite a strong biological rationale, the clinical data to support early decompression
are unconvincing. Accordingly, researchers conducted a prospective multicenter
study to evaluate the role and timing of decompressive surgery in a consecutive
series of patients with cervical SCI. The Surgical Treatment of Acute Spinal
Cord Injury Study (STASCIS) has enrolled 170 patients to date.
The findings of this study, A Prospective Multicenter Trial to Evaluate
the Role and Timing of Decompression in Patients with Cervical Spinal Cord
Injury: Initial One-Year Results of the STASCIS Study , will be presented
by Dr. Fehlings, 10:25 to 10:39 a.m. on Monday, April 28, 2008, during the
76th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Neurological Surgeons
in Chicago. Co-authors are Bizhan Aarabi, MD, Marcel Dvorak, MD, FRCSC, Charles
G. Fisher, MD, FRCSC, James Harrop, MD, Stephen Lewis, MD, Eric M. Massicotte,
MD, FRCSC, Y. Raja Rampersaud, MD, Christopher Shaffrey, MD, and Alexander
Vaccaro, MD; FRCSC.
Patients with cervical SCI (American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) grades
A-D) and evidence on computed tomography (CT)/magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
of canal/cord compression were entered into the prospective multicenter nonrandomized
case-control study. ASIA grade ‘A’ designates complete SCI, and
Grades ‘B’ through ‘D’ designate decreasing levels
of neurological involvement. Decompression was achieved by traction and/or
surgery. Additional patient demographics were as follows:
- Males: 78.1 percent, Females: 21.9 percent
- Mean age 42.2 (±17.3)
- SCI severity: ASIA A (43.6 percent), B(22.3 percent),
C (16.0 percent), D (18.1 percent)
Patients were stratified into “early” (less than 24 hours) or “delayed” (greater
than 24 hours) groups based on time to decompression. There were no significant
differences in age, gender, or ASIA level or medical comorbidities between
the early and delayed groups Outcomes were assessed using the ASIA system.
Traction was used in 28.6 percent of patients in the early group and 21.1 percent
of patients in thedelayed group. To date, six-month and one-year follow-up
has been obtained in 108 and 64 cases, respectively.
At six-month follow-up, 24 percent of the patients in the early decompression
group had a two-grade or greater improvement in ASIA score compared to 4 percent
in the delayed group (p=0.014). “The initial results from our STASCIS
research suggest that decompression within 24 hours of injury may be associated
with improved neurological recovery at one-year follow-up. However, further
recruitment of patients with long-term follow-up is necessary to validate these
promising results,” stated Dr. Fehlings.
Founded in 1931 as the Harvey Cushing Society, the American Association of
Neurological Surgeons (AANS) is a scientific and educational association with
more than 7,200 members worldwide. The AANS is dedicated to advancing the specialty
of neurological surgery in order to provide the highest quality of neurosurgical
care to the public. All active members of the AANS are certified by the American
Board of Neurological Surgery, the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons
(Neurosurgery) of Canada or the Mexican Council of Neurological Surgery, AC.
Neurological surgery is the medical specialty concerned with the prevention,
diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation of disorders that affect the entire
nervous system, including the spinal column, spinal cord, brain and peripheral
nerves.
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Media Representatives: If you would like to cover
the meeting or interview a neurosurgeon - either on-site or via telephone -
please contact the AANS Communications Department at (847) 378-0517 or call
the Annual Meeting Press Room beginning Monday, April 28 at (312) 949-3205.