4.5 Article

Need of vascular surgeon and comparison of value for anterior lumbar interbody fusion (ALIF) in lateral decubitus: Delphi consensus

Journal

EUROPEAN SPINE JOURNAL
Volume 31, Issue 9, Pages 2270-2278

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00586-022-07319-3

Keywords

Interbody spine fusion; ALIF; Spine surgery; Degenerative disc disease; Anterior spinal approach

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Health - Ricerca Corrente 2022

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This study used a two-round Delphi method to assess the consensus among expert spine surgeons regarding the perception of safety, preoperative planning, complications management, and need for vascular surgeons in anterior approaches (SupALIF vs LatALIF). The results showed consensus on several points, such as the consolidated required experience on anterior approaches, the accurate study of vascular anatomy with MRI, the management of complications, and the significant reduction of surgical times with LatALIF compared to SupALIF in combined procedures. The study group also agreed that LatALIF can be performed without the need for a vascular surgeon in routine cases.
Background and purpose Anterior lumbar approaches are recommended for clinical conditions that require interbody stability, spinal deformity corrections or a large fusion area. Anterior lumbar interbody fusion in lateral decubitus position (LatALIF) has gained progressive interest in the last years. The study aims to describe the current habit, the perception of safety and the perceptions of need of vascular surgeons according to experienced spine surgeons by comparing LatALIF to the standard L5-S1 supine ALIF (SupALIF). Methods A two-round Delphi method study was conducted to assess the consensus, within expert spine surgeons, regarding the perception of safety, the preoperative planning, the complications management and the need for vascular surgeons by performing anterior approaches (SupALIF vs LatALIF). Results A total of 14 experts voluntary were involved in the survey. From 82 sentences voted in the first round, a consensus was reached for 38 items. This included the feasibility of safe LatALIF without systematic involvement of vascular surgeon for routine cases (while for revision cases the involvement of the vascular surgeon is an appropriate option) and the appropriateness of standard MRI to evaluate the accessibility of the vascular window. Thirteen sentences reached the final consensus in the second round, whereas no consensus was reached for the remaining 20 statements. Conclusions The Delphi study collected the consensus on several points, such as the consolidated required experience on anterior approaches, the accurate study of vascular anatomy with MRI, the management of complications and the significant reduction of the surgical times of the LatALIF if compared to SupALIF in combined procedures. Furthermore, the study group agrees that LatALIF can be performed without the need for a vascular surgeon in routine cases.

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