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Prospective Robotic-Guided Registry of Spine Surgery

Conditions
Spinal Disease
Interventions
Procedure: Robotic-guided spine surgery
Registration Number
NCT05181098
Lead Sponsor
The National Spine Health Foundation
Brief Summary

This study aims to combine multi-center data of robotic assisted spine surgery, to evaluate the true scope of this advancing technology.

Detailed Description

What is the impact on clinical and patient-reported outcomes for participants who undergo robot assisted surgery? This will be the first multi-center study to prospectively collect data on robotic assisted spine surgery outcomes. The primary objective of this study will be to facilitate quantification of potential short- and long-term benefits of robotically guided spine surgeries.

It is hypothesized that use of robotic guidance during spinal instrumentation will have numerous short- and long-term benefits to both participant and surgeon. Expected benefits include improved surgical and clinical outcomes, lower incidence of procedure-related adverse events (e.g., fewer new neurological deficits, implant-related durotomies, and implant misplacements), improved implant accuracy, lower intraoperative radiation exposure, and lower reoperation rates, when compared to the published literature.

The secondary objective of this study is to assess the clinical performance of robotic instrumentation as per the pre-operative plan. To this end, data on a number of common clinical metrics will be analyzed to determine the extent to which they are affected by the use of robotic guidance during implantation.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
1000
Inclusion Criteria
  • Any pediatric, adolescent or adult patient
  • Undergoing open or MIS robotic-guided spine surgery using the Mazor Core Technology.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Pregnancy
  • active infection
  • malignancy
  • primary abnormalities of bone
  • primary muscle diseases (e.g., muscular dystrophy)
  • neurologic diseases
  • spinal cord abnormalities/lesions
  • paraplegia.

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Robotic-guided surgery groupRobotic-guided spine surgeryAny pediatric, adolescent or adult patient undergoing robotic-guided spine surgery, ages 12-80.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
To evaluate the success of robotic-guided spine surgery, by screw placement accuracy.1 year after surgery

To determine screw accuracy

To evaluate the success of robotic-guided spine surgery, from planning to execution.1 year after surgery

To evaluate the success from planning to execution of robotic screw placement.

To evaluate the success of robotic-guided spine surgery, by revision surgery rates.1 year after surgery

To determine the rate of revision surgery due to symptomatic screw malposition within 1 year

To evaluate the success of robotic-guided spine surgery, by the radiation exposure.1 year after surgery

To determine radiation exposure to the patient and surgeon.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
To evaluate clinical outcomes, by patient disability rating1 year after surgery

To evaluate for changes in Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) scores over 1 year; disability scores range from 0-100, the higher the score the worse the outcome/disability.

To evaluate clinical outcomes, as determined by all cause revisions1 year after surgery

To determine the rate of revision surgery for all causes within 1 year

To evaluate clinical outcomes, by surgical complications1 year after surgery

To determine the rate of surgical complications (wound infection/dehiscence, major neurological deficit, hemorrhage, dural tear)

To evaluate clinical outcomes, by patient reported outcome measures1 year after surgery

To evaluate for changes in Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) scores over 1 year; (PROMIS scores are calculated at T-scores on a 0-100 point scale - for positively worded functions, such as physical function and global health, the higher the score the better the outcome; but for negatively worded functions, like pain interference, the higher the score the worse the outcome).

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

National Spine Health Foundation

🇺🇸

Reston, Virginia, United States

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