Practice preference of revision surgery for recurrent lumbar disc herniation: an international survey of AO spine members

Muthu, Sathish and Ćorluka, Stipe and Hamouda, Waeel Ossama and Ambrosio, Luca and Cunha, Carla and Ivandić, Stjepan and Vadalà, Gianluca and Meisel, Hans-Jorg and Yoon, Timothy S and Wang, Jeffrey C. and Jain, Amit and Buser, Zorica (2025) Practice preference of revision surgery for recurrent lumbar disc herniation: an international survey of AO spine members. European Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery & Traumatology. ISSN 1432-1068

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Abstract

Objective To explore global practice patterns and surgeon preferences in the surgical management of recurrent lumbar disc herniation (rLDH), and to identify factors influencing the choice of technique. Methods A survey was distributed to the AOSpine members globally to ascertain rLDH surgical management preferences. Preference of surgeons for management options such as sequestrectomy, partial discectomy (PD), radical discectomy (RD) and fusion was ascertained for early (< 3 months) and late (> 3 months) rLDH scenarios following initial recovery for 6 months. Results 714 surgeons responded to the survey. In early rLDH, PD was predominantly preferred (48.0%, n = 343) followed by RD (18.3%, n = 131), fusion (17.9%, n = 128) and sequestrectomy (14.4%, n = 103). In late rLDH, 40.2%(n = 287) of the surgeons preferred interbody fusion followed by sequestrectomy (31.7%, n = 226) and RD (21.6%, n = 154). Surgeons predominantly preferred to utilize the same approach as that of index surgery. Fusion was considered when there was a concomitant or incipient degenerative disease. Fusion in the early rLDH is significantly influenced by region, training, and volume of cases handled by the surgeons. Conclusion Partial discectomy and interbody fusion are the predominant management of choice in both the early and late rLDH. The choice of fusion predominantly depends on the state of the index and adjacent segment, instability and degeneration respectively. Fusion in the early rLDH is significantly influenced by region, surgical training, and volume of cases handled by the surgeons.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Research Methods
Spine Surgery
Classification System
Divisions: Orthopaedic Surgery
Depositing User: Mr Repository Admin
Date Deposited: 20 Jan 2026 11:18
Last Modified: 20 Jan 2026 11:18
URI: https://ir.orthopaedicresearchgroup.com/id/eprint/360

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