The grades of recommendations (standards, guidelines, and options) and classes of evidence (I–III) are defined at the end of the "Major Recommendations" field.
Standards. Static lumbar radiographs are not recommended as a stand-alone means to assess fusion status following lumbar arthrodesis surgery.
Guidelines. 1) Lateral flexion and extension radiography is recommended as an adjunct to determine the presence of lumbar fusion postoperatively. The lack of motion between vertebrae, in the absence of rigid instrumentation, is highly suggestive of successful fusion. 2) Technetium- 99 bone scanning is not recommended as a means to assess lumbar fusion.
Options. Several radiographic techniques, including static radiography, lateral flexion–extension radiography, and/or computed tomography (CT) scanning, often in combination, are recommended as assessment modality options for the noninvasive evaluation of symptomatic patients in whom failed lumbar fusion is suspected.
Summary
The assessment of fusion status with static plain radiography is accurate in approximately two thirds of patients treated with lumbar fusion when the radiographic results are compared with surgical exploration findings. Therefore, static plain radiography is not recommended as a stand-alone modality following lumbar fusion procedures. The addition of lateral flexion–extension radiography may improve accuracy because the lack of motion between fused lumbar segments on lateral views is highly suggestive of a solid fusion. Some degree of motion between segments may be present even when the spine has fused. The amount of motion allowable across fused segments is not clear, and the role of internal fixation in limiting motion has also not been adequately addressed. The addition of multiplanar CT scanning results in the detection of pseudarthrosis in some patients in whom fusion has been deemed successful based on plain radiographic criteria. Therefore, CT scanning may be more accurate in the determination of fusion status than plain radiography; however, a rigorous comparison of modern CT scanning and surgical exploration has not been performed. It appears that Roentgen stereophotogrammetric analysis (RSA) is exquisitely sensitive for the detection of motion between vertebral bodies, and the loss of motion between treated vertebral segments does appear to indicate the presence of fusion. The modality, however, is invasive and not widely available. Furthermore, the only comparison of RSA with surgical exploration provided only Class III medical evidence supporting the accuracy of RSA. It is recommended that multiple modalities be used for the noninvasive evaluation of symptomatic patients with suspected fusion failure because no radiographic gold standard exists.
Definitions:
Grades of Recommendation
Standards Recommendations of the strongest type, based on Class I evidence reflecting a high degree of clinical certainty
Guidelines Recommendations based on Class II evidence reflecting a moderate degree of clinical certainty
Options Recommendations based on Class III evidence reflecting unclear clinical certainty
Classes of Evidence
Class I Evidence from one or more well-designed, randomized controlled clinical trials, including overviews of such trials
Class II Evidence from one or more well-designed comparative clinical studies, such as nonrandomized cohort studies, case-control studies, and other comparable studies, including less well-designed randomized controlled trials
Class III Evidence from case series, comparative studies with historical controls, case reports, and expert opinion as well as significantly flawed randomized controlled trials