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Accuracy Study of Robot-assisted Screw Insertion in Spinal Surgery

Not Applicable
Conditions
the Robot-assisted Technique
Interventions
Device: Freehand
Device: the TiRobot system
Registration Number
NCT04040868
Lead Sponsor
Beijing Jishuitan Hospital
Brief Summary

The investigators present the design of a randomized trial to compare the accuracy and safety of screw insertion using the robot-assisted technique versus the conventional fluoroscopy-assisted technique in spine surgery at multicenter. The accuracy and safety of screw insertion are measured by deviation of guide pin placement position, deviation of screw placement position, and intraoperative or postoperative complications. Secondary outcome parameters such as radiation exposure, postoperative recovery, duration of surgery, length of hospital stay and economic appraisal were also evaluated and compared between treatment groups.

Detailed Description

In spinal surgery, the accurate placement of implants is the key to ensure the success of the surgery, to achieve the safety and clinical requirements of internal fixation. Robot-assisted technology has become an effective means to improve the accuracy of implants with higher accuracy, free from fatigue and equivalent repetitive operation. The investigators present the design of a randomized trial to compare the accuracy and safety of screw insertion using the robot-assisted technique versus the conventional fluoroscopy-assisted technique in spine surgery at multicenter.

500 participants per group (1000 participants in total) are being recruited after diagnosis and before treatment through multi-hospital system and randomised to 1) robot-assisted technique or 2) conventional fluoroscopy-assisted technique in spine surgery. Outcomes are being measured pre-operatively, during- surgery and at 3, 6, 12 months post-surgery. The accuracy and safety of screw insertion are measured by deviation of guide pin placement position, deviation of screw placement position, and intraoperative or postoperative complications. Secondary outcome parameters such as radiation exposure, postoperative recovery, duration of surgery, length of hospital stay and economic appraisal were also evaluated and compared between treatment groups.

The study is addressing key questions of importance by evaluating the TiRobot-assisted technique versus the conventional fluoroscopy-assisted technique in spine surgery at multicenter. Outputs include evidence to facilitate more effective and safe decision making about surgical treatment for spine.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
1000
Inclusion Criteria
  • age 18 or above, gender not limited;
  • patients eligible for surgery;
  • the patient signed the informed consent and agreed to participate in this study.
Exclusion Criteria
  • patients with severe osteoporosis;
  • patients with old fractures;
  • patients with developmental deformity of the vertebral body with screw placement;
  • patients complicated with severe systemic diseases;
  • patients with coagulation dysfunction;
  • patients deemed unsuitable for the test by the clinical institution.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
conventional fluoroscopy-assisted techniqueFreehand-
robot-assisted techniquethe TiRobot system-
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Deviation of guide pin placement positionduring operation

After completing guide pin placement preparation, do the C arm scan, obtain 3-D scanning image, plan on the image, position by the robot, finish the needle placement and obtain 3-D scanning image again. Fusion two groups of the image, measure the distance between the entry and exit points of the guide pin and the surgical planning, calculate the insertion deviation, and evaluate the insertion accuracy of the guide pin.

Insertion deviation = (Input offset distance + Output offset distance) / 2, the unit is mm.

If more than one guide pin is needed for the operation, the deviation of the insertion shall be calculated separately and the average shall be taken.

Time of guide pin adjustionduring operation

After the guide pin is placed, when the position deviation needs to be adjusted, the time consumed by adjusting the guide pin.

Intraoperative ComplicationsAfter operation up to 4 weeks

Intraoperative complications, including but not limited to: positioning complications (blindness, nerve injury, skin breakdown), acute spinal cord injury, vascular Injury(vertebral injury, aorto-iliac injury), cardiovascular events, pulmonary complications, acute kidney injury.

Deviation of screw placement positionduring operation

Postoperative screw placement position deviation was measured.

The position of spinal screws was evaluated by postoperative imaging. Standard for classification of spinal screw placement :

Excellent:The screw was completely in the pedicle and did not penetrate the cortex.

Good: The screw cortical perforation \< 2mm, or less than 50% of the screw diameter.

Bad: The screw cortical perforation \> 2mm, or more than 50% of the screw diameter.

Time of screw adjustionduring operation

After the screw is placed, when the position deviation needs to be adjusted, the time consumed by adjusting the screw.

Postoperative ComplicationsThe time was within 1 year after the operation.

Postoperative complications,including but not limited to: cardiovascular events, pulmonary complications, acute kidney injury, ileus, coagulopathy and wound infection. The time was within 1 year after the operation.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Duration of surgeryduring operation

Duration of surgery refers to the time from the end of anesthesia to the end of the operation. In addition to the total operation time, the time before the screw placement, the time used for the screw placement, the time used for intraoperative decompression or reduction (if any) and the time used for install connecting rod were separately counted.

Radiation exposureduring operation

Measure and calculate the radiation exposure to the patients and clinicians.

JOA score 24 hours before surgery24 hours before surgery

For patients with cervical vertebra diseases, a 17-point cervical JOA score was used to evaluate the spinal cord function. For patients with lumbar vertebral disease, a 29-point lumbar JOA score was used to evaluate spinal cord function. JOA scores of the patients were collected before surgery, after surgery, and 3 months, 6 months and 1 year postoperatively.

Visual analogue scale (VAS) score 24 hours after surgery24 hours after surgery

Patients' pain information was evaluated by VAS score. The visual analogue scale or visual analog scale (VAS) is a psychometric response scale which can be used in questionnaires. It is a measurement instrument for subjective characteristics or attitudes that cannot be directly measured. When responding to a VAS item, respondents specify their level of agreement to a statement by indicating a position along a continuous line between two end-points.

Visual analogue scale (VAS) score 24 hours before surgery24 hours before surgery

Patients' pain information was evaluated by VAS score. The visual analogue scale or visual analog scale (VAS) is a psychometric response scale which can be used in questionnaires. It is a measurement instrument for subjective characteristics or attitudes that cannot be directly measured. When responding to a VAS item, respondents specify their level of agreement to a statement by indicating a position along a continuous line between two end-points.

Visual analogue scale (VAS) score 6 months after surgery6 months after surgery

Patients' pain information was evaluated by VAS score. The visual analogue scale or visual analog scale (VAS) is a psychometric response scale which can be used in questionnaires. It is a measurement instrument for subjective characteristics or attitudes that cannot be directly measured. When responding to a VAS item, respondents specify their level of agreement to a statement by indicating a position along a continuous line between two end-points.

JOA score 6 months after surgery6 months after surgery

For patients with cervical vertebra diseases, a 17-point cervical JOA score was used to evaluate the spinal cord function. For patients with lumbar vertebral disease, a 29-point lumbar JOA score was used to evaluate spinal cord function. JOA scores of the patients were collected before surgery, after surgery, and 3 months, 6 months and 1 year postoperatively.

NDI score 3 months after surgery3 months after surgery

For patients with cervical vertebra diseases, NDI score was used to evaluate cervical spine dysfunction index. Total score from 0 (no disability) to 50 (complete disability).

ODI score 24 hours before surgery24 hours before surgery

For patients with lumbar vertebra diseases, ODI score was used to evaluate the lumbago related score. The Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) is an index derived from the Oswestry Low Back Pain Questionnaire used by clinicians and researchers to quantify disability for low back pain.

0% -20%: Minimal disability 21%-40%: Moderate Disability 41%-60%: Severe Disability 61%-80%: Crippling back pain 81%-100%: These patients are either bed-bound or have an exaggeration of their symptoms.

Health related quality of life 3 months after surgery3 months after surgery

Health related quality of life is being assessed with the SF-36 that is the most widely used QOL measure in the world with norms for the Australian general population available. The SF-36 contains a mental health and physical health summary scale suitable to measure the impact of the intervention on patients' wellbeing.

JOA score 1 year after surgery1 year after surgery

For patients with cervical vertebra diseases, a 17-point cervical JOA score was used to evaluate the spinal cord function. For patients with lumbar vertebral disease, a 29-point lumbar JOA score was used to evaluate spinal cord function. JOA scores of the patients were collected before surgery, after surgery, and 3 months, 6 months and 1 year postoperatively.

NDI score 24 hours before surgery24 hours before surgery

For patients with cervical vertebra diseases, NDI score was used to evaluate cervical spine dysfunction index. Total score from 0 (no disability) to 50 (complete disability).

NDI score 6 months after surgery6 months after surgery

For patients with cervical vertebra diseases, NDI score was used to evaluate cervical spine dysfunction index. Total score from 0 (no disability) to 50 (complete disability).

Economic appraisalThe time was within 1 year after the operation.

Costs for each arm of the trial will be analysed by components of the intervention pathway (e.g. pre-consultation, work-up, theatre, post-treatment, follow-up, management/coordination, side-effects, etc.); by expenditure category (e.g. capital, staff, consumables, overheads, other); and by incidence (i.e. who bears the costs). The cost component of the economic appraisal will thus assess the cost drivers from a range of perspectives for both intervention approaches. Downstream costs and potential cost offsets incurred beyond the randomized trial data collection period will be modelled from the literature and expert opinion, with sources clearly documented.

Visual analogue scale (VAS) score 3 months after surgery3 months after surgery

Patients' pain information was evaluated by VAS score. The visual analogue scale or visual analog scale (VAS) is a psychometric response scale which can be used in questionnaires. It is a measurement instrument for subjective characteristics or attitudes that cannot be directly measured. When responding to a VAS item, respondents specify their level of agreement to a statement by indicating a position along a continuous line between two end-points.

Visual analogue scale (VAS) score 1 year after surgery1 year after surgery

Patients' pain information was evaluated by VAS score. The visual analogue scale or visual analog scale (VAS) is a psychometric response scale which can be used in questionnaires. It is a measurement instrument for subjective characteristics or attitudes that cannot be directly measured. When responding to a VAS item, respondents specify their level of agreement to a statement by indicating a position along a continuous line between two end-points.

JOA score 24 hours after surgery24 hours after surgery

For patients with cervical vertebra diseases, a 17-point cervical JOA score was used to evaluate the spinal cord function. For patients with lumbar vertebral disease, a 29-point lumbar JOA score was used to evaluate spinal cord function. JOA scores of the patients were collected before surgery, after surgery, and 3 months, 6 months and 1 year postoperatively.

JOA score 3 months after surgery3 months after surgery

For patients with cervical vertebra diseases, a 17-point cervical JOA score was used to evaluate the spinal cord function. For patients with lumbar vertebral disease, a 29-point lumbar JOA score was used to evaluate spinal cord function. JOA scores of the patients were collected before surgery, after surgery, and 3 months, 6 months and 1 year postoperatively.

NDI score 24 hours after surgery24 hours after surgery

For patients with cervical vertebra diseases, NDI score was used to evaluate cervical spine dysfunction index. Total score from 0 (no disability) to 50 (complete disability).

Health related quality of life 1 year after surgery1 year after surgery

Health related quality of life is being assessed with the SF-36 that is the most widely used QOL measure in the world with norms for the Australian general population available. The SF-36 contains a mental health and physical health summary scale suitable to measure the impact of the intervention on patients' wellbeing.

NDI score 1 year after surgery1 year after surgery

For patients with cervical vertebra diseases, NDI score was used to evaluate cervical spine dysfunction index. Total score from 0 (no disability) to 50 (complete disability).

ODI score 24 hours after surgery24 hours after surgery

For patients with lumbar vertebra diseases, ODI score was used to evaluate the lumbago related score. The Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) is an index derived from the Oswestry Low Back Pain Questionnaire used by clinicians and researchers to quantify disability for low back pain.

0% -20%: Minimal disability 21%-40%: Moderate Disability 41%-60%: Severe Disability 61%-80%: Crippling back pain 81%-100%: These patients are either bed-bound or have an exaggeration of their symptoms.

Health related quality of life 6 months after surgery6 months after surgery

Health related quality of life is being assessed with the SF-36 that is the most widely used QOL measure in the world with norms for the Australian general population available. The SF-36 contains a mental health and physical health summary scale suitable to measure the impact of the intervention on patients' wellbeing.

length of hospital stayUp to the 4 weeks

Length of hospital stay refers to the time from the first day of hospitalization to the discharge after surgery.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Beijing Jishuitan Hospital

🇨🇳

Beijing, Beijing, China

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