Abstract

Background: When conventional interventional procedures fail, percutaneous epidural adhesiolysis (PEA), which has moderate evidence for successful treatment of lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS), has been recommended over surgical treatments. In a previous study, we demonstrated the efficacy of a newly developed inflatable balloon catheter for overcoming the access limitations of pre-existing catheters for patients with severe stenosis or adhesions. Objectives: This study compared the treatment response of combined PEA with balloon decompression and PEA only in patients with central LSS over 6 months of follow-up. Study Design: This study used a randomized, single-blinded, active-controlled trial design. Setting: This study took place in a single-center, academic, outpatient interventional pain management clinic. Methods: This randomized controlled study included 60 patients with refractory central LSS who suffered from chronic lower back pain and/or lumbar radicular pain. Patients failed to maintain improvement for > 1 month with epidural steroid injection or PEA using a balloon-less catheter. Patients were randomly assigned to one of 2 interventions: balloon-less (n = 30) and inflatable balloon catheter (n = 30). The Numeric Rating Scale (NRS-11), Oswestry Disability Index (ODI), Global Perceived Effect of Satisfaction (GPES), and Medication Quantification Scale III were each measured at 1, 3, and 6 months after PEA. Results: There was a significant difference between groups in NRS-11 reduction ≥ 50% (or 4 points), ODI reduction ≥ 30% (or 10 points), GPES ≥ 6 and ≥ 4 points at 6 months, and NRS11 reduction ≥ 50% (or 4 points) at 3 months after PEA (P < .03). The proportion of successful responders was higher in the balloon group than in the balloon-less group throughout the total follow-up period. Furthermore, there was a statistically significant difference between groups at 6 months after PEA (P = .035). Limitations: The results may vary according to the definition of successful response. Follow-up loss in the present study seemed to be high. Conclusion: PEA using the inflatable balloon catheter leads to significant pain reduction and functional improvement compared to PEA using the balloon-less catheter in patients with central LSS. The study protocol was approved by our institutional review board (2012-0235), and written informed consent was obtained from all patients. The trial was registered with the Clinical Research Information Service (KCT 0002093). Key words: Balloon decompression, central, chronic pain, epidural adhesiolysis, lumbar, percutaneous, radiculopathy, spinal stenosis

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