Friday Nov 28, 2025
Wednesday, 17 July 2013 00:00 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
What’s more, people who had the procedure ended up in the hospital more often over the next year, compared to the conservative treatment group. They were also more likely to be admitted to an intensive care unit or sent to a nursing home.
The researchers can’t say that the procedures didn’t give some of the patients relief from pain, said McCullough, who is now a neuroradiologist with Radia in Seattle.
In an editorial accompanying the study in JAMA Internal Medicine, Dr. Douglas Bauer writes that the study “convincingly” shows that spinal augmentation is unlikely to reduce deaths after back fractures.
“Until better evidence becomes available, the potential benefits of vertebral augmentation remain unproven, and it should not be routinely offered to patients with osteoporotic vertebral fracture to improve pain, improve function, or reduce mortality,” Bauer, a professor at the University of California, San Francisco, added.
However, Dr. Kirkham B. Wood, chief of the orthopedic spine service at Boston’s Massachusetts General Hospital, said the new study has limitations.
For example, it did not separate the two main forms of spinal augmentation surgery from the other, and an older form of augmentation made up the majority of the included procedures.
“It’s not going to change anyone’s practice,” Wood said about the study, adding that the procedure is still important to consider.