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A 10-year assessment of a controlled trial comparing debridement and anterior spinal fusion in the management of tuberculosis of the spine in patients on standard chemotherapy in Hong Kong. Eighth Report of the Medical Research Council Working Party on Tuberculosis of the Spine


Abstract

One hundred and fifty patients in Hong Kong with a diagnosis of tuberculosis of the thoracic, thoracolumbar or lumbar spine were allocated a random to the "Hong Kong" radical resection of the lesion and the insertion of autologous bone grafts (Rad. series) or to debridement of the spinal focus without bone grafting (Deb. series). All patients received daily chemotherapy with para-aminosalicylic acid (PAS) plus isoniazid for 18 months, with streptomycin for the first three months. After exclusions, the main analyses of this report concern 119 patients (58 Rad., 61 Deb.) followed up for 10 years. During the first five years the allocated regimen was modified because of the spinal lesion in 14 patients, but there were no further modifications between five and 10 years. No patient developed a sinus or clinically evident abscess or a neurological abnormality between five and 10 years. Bony fusion occurred earlier and in a higher proportion of patients in the Rad, series but at five and 10 years there was vary little difference between the series. Over the period of 10 years there was a mean increase in vertebral loss of 0.05 of a vertebral body in the Rad. series and 0.23 in the Deb. series. In both series most of this loss occurred in the first 18 months, with very little subsequent change in the next eight and a half years. Over the 10 years there was a mean reduction in the angle of kyphosis in the Rad. series of 1.4 degrees for patients with thoracic and thoracolumbar lesions and 0.5 degrees for those with lumbar lesions. By contrast, in the Deb. series there were mean increases in the angle of 9.8 degrees and 7.6 degrees respectively. In both series most of the changes had occurred early, and persisted subsequently. At 10 years 57 of 58 Rad. and all 61 Deb. patients had a favourable status, 50 (86 per cent) and 54 (89 per cent) respectively on the allocated regimen without modification.

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