# Comparative study of long-term efficacy of spinal fusion surgery and non-surgical treatment for chronic radicular lumbar disease

**Authors:** Yuanmei Li, Huijuan Song, Hongzhen Zhou, Jungui Zhou, Zhou Zhou

PMC · DOI: 10.1590/1806-9282.20240902 · Revista da Associação Médica Brasileira · 2025-03-17

## TL;DR

This study compares spinal fusion surgery and non-surgical treatment for chronic lower back issues, finding surgery more effective long-term.

## Contribution

Demonstrates that spinal fusion surgery provides superior long-term outcomes compared to non-surgical treatment for chronic radicular lumbar disease.

## Key findings

- Surgical group had higher efficacy (97.87%) and lower recurrence (4.26%) after one year.
- Surgical treatment significantly reduced pain and improved quality of life over time.
- Non-surgical treatment showed no significant long-term improvement in pain or function.

## Abstract

The objective of this study was to compare the long-term efficacy of spinal fusion surgery versus non-surgical treatment for chronic radicular lumbar spondylopathy.

A total of 93 patients with chronic radicular lumbar spondylopathy admitted to our hospital from February 2020 to February 2021 were randomly divided into a non-surgical group (n=46, conservative treatment) and a surgical group (n=47, spinal fusion surgery). Efficacy, recurrence rate, pain index, lumbar function recovery, and quality of life were evaluated and compared between the groups.

The surgical group had a higher total effective rate (97.87 vs. 86.96%, p<0.05) and a lower recurrence rate after 1 year (4.26 vs. 21.74%, p<0.05) compared to the non-surgical group. There was no significant difference in visual analog scale scores for lower back pain and lower limb pain between the groups before treatment and for the first 3 days (p>0.05). However, at 1 month, 3 months, and 1 year after treatment, the visual analog scale scores were significantly lower in the surgical group (p<0.05). The Japanese Orthopedic Association score showed no significant difference before treatment (p>0.05) but increased significantly in the surgical group after 1 month, 3 months, and 1 year (p<0.05). Similarly, there was no significant difference in the Short Form 36-Item Health Survey score before treatment (p>0.05), but the surgical group had significantly higher scores after 1 year (p<0.05).

Spinal fusion surgery offers better long-term efficacy than non-surgical treatment for chronic radicular lumbar spondylopathy. It effectively alleviates lower back and limb pain, promotes lumbar function recovery, and improves quality of life, making it a recommended treatment option.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** radicular lumbar spondylopathy (MESH:D011842), radicular lumbar disease (MESH:C535531), lower back and limb pain (MESH:D017116), pain (MESH:D010146)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

22 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11918860/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11918860