# Comparison of Complication Rates Between Transforaminal Interbody Fusion and Anteroposterior Fusion for One- or Two-Level Degenerative Lumbar Spine Surgery: A Propensity Score Matched Analysis

**Authors:** Kosei Nagata, Steven D Glassman, Morgan E Brown, Christy Daniels, Patrick Merkel, Mladen Djurasovic, Jeffrey Gum, Leah Carreon

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.66455 · 2024-08-08

## TL;DR

This study compares complication rates of two spinal fusion approaches and finds similar pain outcomes but shorter recovery with one method.

## Contribution

A propensity score matched analysis comparing complication rates of TLIF and AP fusion for lumbar spine surgery.

## Key findings

- TLIF had shorter operative times and hospital stays compared to AP fusion.
- Residual leg and back pain incidence was similar between TLIF and AP groups.
- AP fusion was associated with higher constipation rates but otherwise similar complications.

## Abstract

Introduction

Although transforaminal interbody fusion (TLIF) and anterior lumbar interbody fusion (ALIF) combined with posterior fusion (AP) have similar fusion rates, it is unclear if choice of approach has an impact on post-operative complications.

Research question

Is the incidence of residual leg and/or back pain requiring additional treatment after one- or two-level TLIF and AP similar?

Material and methods

Adult patients who underwent one- or two-level TLIF or AP for degenerative pathology were identified and matched using age, sex, body mass index (BMI), American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA), insurance status, smoking status, revision and number of levels fused. The incidence of radicular leg and back pain requiring emergency department visit/readmission or same level surgical intervention was compared between the two groups.

Results

Of the 319 TLIF and 288 AP cases, 119 cases in each cohort were matched. TLIF patients had shorter operative times (203 min vs 258 min, P<0.001) and hospital stays than the AP patients (3.76 days vs 4.98 days, P<0.001). The incidence of residual leg pain (7 vs 5, P=0.769) and back pain (13 vs 15, P=0.841) was similar between the two groups. Except for constipation, which was more common in the AP group, the incidence of complications was similar between the two groups.

Conclusions

Patients undergoing one- or two-level TLIF showed shorter operative time and hospital stay compared with those undergoing AP. The incidence of leg radiculopathy and back pain was similar between the two groups. Surgeons should consider these findings as part of the decision-making process regarding which approach to use in patients requiring a lumbar interbody fusion.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** degenerative pathology (MESH:D019636), radiculopathy (MESH:D011843), back pain (MESH:D001416), constipation (MESH:D003248), leg and/or back pain (MESH:D010146), leg (MESH:D010264)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11380527