International

Where are you?

To give you the most accurate information about our products and what we can do for you, we need to direct you to the right site.

USA
International

Retrospective: Lumbar interbodies, 92.73% fusion rate at one year, high risk patient cohorts, MagnetOs Putty

Fusion rate of biphasic calcium phosphate bone graft with needle-shaped submicron surface topography in interbody lumbar fusion for degenerative disc disease: A single-center retrospective review

BACKGROUND: Calcium phosphate bone grafts are emerging as alternatives to autologous bone grafts in lumbar spinal fusion. This study evaluates the 12-month fusion rate and clinical outcomes of lumbar interbody fusion using synthetic biphasic calcium phosphate with submicron needle-shaped surface topography (BCP<mm).

METHODS: A retrospective review identified patients who underwent lumbar interbody arthrodesis with BCP<mm, with or without autograft. Fusion was assessed by an independent neuroradiologist using a computed tomography alphanumeric classification based on bridging bone on 12-month postoperative computed tomography. Secondary outcomes included changes in visual analog scale, length of stay, and fusion of all treated levels.

RESULTS: Fifty-five patients with 93 treated levels were analyzed (average age: 62.78 years; body mass index: 28.73 kg/m²). Patients had an average of 3 comorbidities and a median of 2 levels fused. Procedures included anterior (52 levels), transforaminal (22 levels), and lateral lumbar interbody fusion (19 levels). Fusion occurred in 95.70% of levels without evidence of fixation failure. Fusion rates were unaffected by procedure type (P = 0.965) or supplemental autograft use (P = 1.00). Complications were reported in 4 patients. Six-month postoperative visual analog scale improved by a mean of 25.10 (P < 0.0001).

CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates a high fusion rate (95.70% – 89/93 treated levels, 92.73% – 51/55 patients) and low complication rate in a diverse patient population with multiple comorbidities, suggesting BCP<mm is a viable graft material for lumbar interbody fusion.

MAT-0084