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Aug 06 2009

Vertebroplasty Found to be Useless for Osteoporotic Fracture and Disk Pain

Two articles in today’s New England Journal of Medicine are the first randomized placebo controlled trials of vertebroplasty, a procedure which involves injecting cement into the vertebrae of people who have suffered from painful osteoporotic fractures of the vertebrae. In the first study 78 patients got either vertebroplasty or a fake procedure. There was no difference in pain ratings measured at several time points out to six months.

vertebroplasty

The second study involved 131 patients who got either a sham or vertebroplasty procedure. There were no differences in the primary outcomes of pain or disability at one month after treatment. There was a pattern of clinical improvement in pain (30% reduction in pain, 64% v 48%, p=0.06) that was not one of the original study outcomes. The group that got the sham procedure, however, were more likely to request a repeat procedure (i.e. got a vertebroplasty in the end) (43% v 12%, p<.05). Some of the authors said they were “shocked” by the results and others said they should do “more research” or that it “might help some patients” or “maybe they want a placebo” since the fake group got better as well as the vertebroplasty group. Maybe they should pay the $4,000 for the MRI and procedure out of their pockets rather than billing it to Medicare so that they have a better placebo response. That would help out on President Barack Obama’s plans to reduce US healthcare costs by eliminating the 30% of tests and procedures that have been found to be useless. He can add this one to the list.

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