Genicular nerve radiofrequency ablation practice patterns:国际疼痛与脊柱介入学会调查研究

Reza Ehsanian , Shawn Fernandez , Amanda Cooper , Daniel M. Cushman , Aaron Conger , Taylor Burnham , Alexandra E. Fogarty , Rohit Aiyer , Katie Smolinski , Zachary L. McCormick
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:慢性膝关节疼痛通常由膝关节骨性关节炎(OA)等退行性病变引起,并可能在全膝关节置换术(TKA)等手术治疗后加重。全球约有 8600 万人受到膝关节 OA 的影响,导致功能减退、活动受限和残疾。虽然全膝关节置换术是治疗难治性膝关节 OA 的常见手术疗法,但多达 20% 的患者术后会出现比术前疼痛更严重的慢性膝关节疼痛。膝神经射频消融术(GnRFA)已成为治疗对保守治疗无效的膝关节OA疼痛和TKA术后慢性疼痛的一种很有前景的干预方法。GnRFA 是一种循证技术,得到了多项前瞻性队列研究和随机对照试验 (RCT) 的支持。本研究旨在了解介入疼痛科医生在治疗继发于 OA 的膝关节疼痛或 TKA 术后持续性疼痛时,在患者选择、预后阻滞的使用、成像、神经靶点、GnRFA 类型和 GnRFA 技术方面的实践模式。方法从 2024 年 1 月 16 日至 2024 年 2 月 29 日,通过电子邮件向国际疼痛与脊柱介入学会 (IPSIS) 的会员发放了一份包含 29 个问题的匿名调查。调查评估了与患者选择、预后区块使用和 GnRFA 技术相关的实践模式。使用 REDCap 软件收集和存储数据,并计算描述性统计数据。结果 共分析了 150 份完成的调查问卷,完成率为发出调查问卷的 2.0%,打开电子邮件的 3.5%,点击调查链接的 56.8%。受访者一般采用常见的选择方案,包括 OA 分级(Kelgren-Lawrence 3 级和 4 级)、保守治疗失败持续时间(3-6 个月)、单一麻醉阻滞范例以及在 GnRFA 手术中使用透视引导。在预后阻滞过程中使用的麻醉剂量、将预后阻滞视为 "阳性 "的阈值、所使用的技术以及 GnRFA 手术中的目标神经方面,受访者之间的差异较大。虽然在患者选择和手术技术的某些方面已达成共识,但在 GnRFA 的预后阻滞方案和神经靶点方面还存在很大差异。这些发现凸显了进一步研究的必要性,以探索 GnRFA 的长期疗效和安全性,并在不同的实践环境中实现技术和方案的标准化,最终改善患者的预后和生活质量。低回复率可能会限制其普遍性,而且该调查并不包括消融所使用的活动尖端尺寸的数据,也不包括在采用 GnRFA 之前是否应穷尽其他程序的数据。此外,仅对 IPSIS 会员进行调查可能无法完全代表疼痛治疗专家的多样性,从而可能导致抽样偏差。未来的研究应包括更广泛的专业组织成员,以提高代表性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Genicular nerve radiofrequency ablation practice patterns: A survey study of the International Pain and Spine Interventional Society

Introduction

Chronic knee pain often results from degenerative conditions such as knee osteoarthritis (OA) and can worsen after surgical interventions like total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Knee OA affects approximately 86 million individuals globally, leading to decreased function, mobility limitations, and disability. While TKA is a common surgical treatment for refractory knee OA, though up to 20 % of patients experience chronic post-operative knee pain worse than their pre-operative pain. Genicular nerve radiofrequency ablation (GnRFA) has emerged as a promising intervention for knee OA pain unresponsive to conservative management and for chronic post-TKA pain. GnRFA is an evidence-based technique supported by multiple prospective cohort studies and randomized controlled trials (RCTs). However, practice patterns and GnRFA techniques vary, and no peer-reviewed publication has yet quantified these variations in real-world clinical practice.

Objective

This study aims to understand the practice patterns of interventional pain physicians regarding patient selection, use of prognostic blocks, imaging, nerve targets, GnRFA types, and GnRFA techniques in treating knee pain secondary to OA or persistent post-TKA pain.

Methods

An anonymous 29-question survey was distributed via electronic mail to members of the International Pain and Spine Intervention Society (IPSIS) from January 16, 2024, to February 29, 2024. The survey assessed practice patterns related to patient selection, prognostic block use, and GnRFA techniques. Data were collected and stored using REDCap software, with descriptive statistics calculated.

Results

A total of 150 completed surveys were analyzed, representing a completion rate of 2.0 % of surveys sent, 3.5 % of emails opened, and 56.8 % of those who clicked on the survey link. Respondents generally use common selection protocols regarding OA grade (Kelgren-Lawrence 3 and 4), duration of failed conservative care (3–6 months), a single anesthetic block paradigm, and use of fluoroscopic guidance for the GnRFA procedure. More variability was reported between respondents regarding the volume of anesthetic used during prognostic blocks, the threshold to consider a prognostic block “positive,” the technology used, and nerves targeted during the GnRFA procedure.

Conclusion

The study provides valuable insights into the current practice patterns of GnRFA among interventional pain physicians. While there is consensus on some aspects of patient selection and procedural techniques, significant variability exists in prognostic block protocols and nerve targets for GnRFA. These findings highlight the need for further research to explore the long-term efficacy and safety of GnRFA and to standardize techniques and protocols across different practice settings, ultimately improving patient outcomes and quality of life. The low response rate may limit generalizability, and the survey did not include data on active tip sizes used for ablation or whether other procedures should be exhausted before resorting to GnRFA. Additionally, a survey to IPSIS membership only may not fully represent a diverse cohort of pain management specialists, potentially introducing sampling bias. Future studies should include members from a broader range of professional organizations to enhance representativeness.

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