Minimally Invasive Percutaneous Techniques for the Treatment of Cervical Disc Herniation: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Study Selection and Data Extraction
2.3. Inclusion Criteria
- P (patients): Patients with cervicogenic ailments and diagnosed with contained cervical disc herniation (protrusions without rupture of the annulus fibrosus with no evidence of extrusion or sequestration) during MRI examination.
- I (intervention): Patients who underwent percutaneous, minimally invasive cervical spine interventions.
- C (comparison): Individuals who underwent other cervical spinal interventions and those with cervicogenic ailments who were treated conservatively.
- O (outcomes): Results obtained with minimally invasive interventions or via patient’s observations, with the VAS assessment, NDI score, and MacNab scale used as indicators of treatment success during various follow-up periods. Both complications and re-surgery rates were also reviewed.
- S (study design): All research articles, case studies, and comparative studies such as case–control studies, cohort studies, and randomized clinical trials published in English up to July 2024 were taken into consideration. The included studies were required to report at least one of the above outcomes.
2.4. Exclusion Criteria
2.5. Data Items
2.6. Data Availability
2.7. Risk of Bias Assessment
2.8. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Study Selection
3.2. Risk of Bias Assessment
3.3. Percutaneous Cervical Nucleoplasty—Meta-Analysis and Outcomes
3.4. Literature Review
3.4.1. Minimally Invasive Percutaneous Surgical Techniques Used Among the Studies
Percutaneous Cervical Nucleoplasty (PCN)
Percutaneous Cervical Discectomy (PCD)
Percutaneous Cervical Annuloplasty (PCA)
Percutaneous Pulsed Radiofrequency (PRF)
Anterior Cervical Discectomy (ACD)
Indications and Contraindications for Minimally Invasive Percutaneous Surgical Techniques
3.5. Results of the Literature Review
3.5.1. Percutaneous Cervical Nucleoplasty (PCN) vs. Percutaneous Cervical Discectomy (PCD)
3.5.2. PCN + PCD, PCD vs. PCN vs. PDCN, PCD
3.5.3. Percutaneous Cervical Nucleoplasty (PCN) vs. Anterior Cervical Discectomy (ACD)
3.5.4. Percutaneous Cervical Nucleoplasty (PCN) vs. Conservative Treatment (CT)
3.5.5. Percutaneous Cervical Nucleoplasty (PCN) vs. Percutaneous Pulsed Radiofrequency (PRF)
3.5.6. Percutaneous Cervical Annuloplasty (PCA)
3.5.7. Complications and Reoperation Rate
4. Discussion
4.1. Meta-Analysis Outcomes
4.2. Risk of Bias and Methodological Considerations
4.3. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
ACD | Anterior Cervical Discectomy |
ACDF | Anterior Cervical Discectomy and Fusion |
CI | Confidence Interval |
CT | Conservative Treatment |
FU | Follow-up Period |
NDI | Neck Disability Index |
PCA | Percutaneous Cervical Annuloplasty |
PCD | Percutaneous Cervical Discectomy |
PCN | Percutaneous Cervical Nucleoplasty |
PDCN | Percutaneous Cervical Discectomy with Nucleoplasty |
PRF | Percutaneous Pulsed Radiofrequency |
PRISMA | Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis Guidelines |
SMD | Standardised Mean Difference |
VAS | Visual Analogue Scale |
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Reference, Year | Intervention, Study Design | No. of Patients | Treated Levels | Follow-Up | Outcome | Complications, Reoperations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
De Rooij et al., 2022 [6] | PCN, Retrospective | 158 | C4-Th1, 158 | 41.5 months | 67.8% fully recovered, 93.3% satisfied | Reoperation rate: 21.4% |
Kim et al., 2022 [7] | PCN, Retrospective | 44 | C4-C7, 44 | 15.4 months | VAS: 7.5 to 2.9 at last FU, 59.1% excellent/good (McNab) | Reoperation rate: 3/44 (6.8%) |
Pandolfi et al., 2021 [8] | PCN, Prospective | 20 | C3-C7, 22 | 2 years | VAS: 7.9 to 2.5 (2 years) | None |
Li et al., 2020 [9] | PCN, Retrospective | 40 | C4-C6, 42 | 6 years | Clinical effective rates: 67.5–52.94% (short- to long-term FU) | Reoperation rate: 8.82% |
Halim et al., 2013 [10] | PCN, Retrospective | 69 Group A: 27 (fulfilled ideal selection criteria). Group B: 42 | Group A: C3-C7, 27 Group B: C3-C7, 50 | 24 months | Pain relief: 78% in Group A, 60% in Group B. No improvement/worse pain: 22% in Group A, 38% in Group B | None |
Sim et al., 2011 [11] | PCN, Retrospective | 22 | C3-C7, 46 | 6 months | VAS: 9.3 to 3.4. McNab: excellent/good 17/22 (77.3%) | None |
Timmermann et al., 2011 [12] | PCN, Prospective | 32 | C2-C7, 40 | 4–6 weeks | VAS: 8.8 to 0.4 at 4 weeks | None |
Li et al., 2008 [13] | PCN, Prospective | 126 | C3-C7, 125 | 2 years | MacNab excellent/good: 103/126 (83.7%) | Perc-D Spine Wand broken in one patient |
Bonaldi et al., 2006 [14] | PCN, Prospective | 55 | C4-C7, 75 | 2–29 months | McNab: excellent/good 80–85% | One discitis, rupture of the tip of Perc-DC Spine Wand in one instance |
He et al., 2020 [15] | PCA, Prospective | 33 | C4-C7, 33 | 1 year | VAS: 6.8 to 2.5. McNab excellent: 64–82% | None |
Ierardi et al., 2020 [16] | PCN vs. PCD, Retrospective | 50 (26 PCN, 24 PCD) | C3-C7, PCN: 26 PCD: 24 | 6 months | MacNab excellent/good: PCD 19/24 (79%), PCN 21/26 (81%) at 6 months | None |
Li et al., 2019 [17] | PDCN (PCN + PCD), Retrospective | 74 | C3-C7, 130 | 1 year | Effective rates of 94.6% (1 week) and 90.6% (last FU). McNab: excellent/good 75.7% at last FU | 2 cases of discitis (2.7%) |
Yang et al., 2014 [18] | PCD vs. PCN vs. PCDN, Retrospective | 171 (97 PCD,50 PCN, 24 PCDN) | C3-C7, PCD: 98, PCN: 50, PCDN: 23 | 2–8 years | McNab excellent/good: 81.3% (PCD), 82.4% (PCN), 83.2 (PCDN) | During PCN, plasma knife was broken. Discitis: 1 PCD,1 PCN |
Schubert et al., 2014 [19] | PCD, Retrospective | 95 | C3-C7, 107 | 2 years | MacNab excellent/good: 81.4%; 81 patients (94.2%) would choose this method again | 9 reoperations |
Yan et al., 2010 [20] | PCN vs. PCD, Retrospective | 176 (81 PCN, 95 PCD) | C3-C7, PCN: 81 PCD: 95 | 16–48 months | McNab excellent/good: 77.8% (PCN), 79.5% (PCD) | Perc-D Spine Wand broken after PCN; 1 discitis after PCD |
Chen et al., 2022 [21] | PCN vs. CT, Prospective | 71 PCN, 21 CT | C3-C7, 127 | 6 months | PCN significantly superior to CT for both pain relief and functional improvements | Re-surgery rate 4.44% (4/90) after PCN |
Cesaroni et al., 2010 [22] | PCN vs. CT, RCT | 62 PCN, 53 CT | Not reported | 1 year | Significant VAS and NDI improvement in PCN group | None |
Birnbaum, 2009 [23] | PCN vs. CT, RCT | 26 PCN, 30 CT | C4-C7, 29 | 2 years | VAS: PCN 8.8 to 2.3, CT 8.4 to 5.1 | None |
Nardi et al., 2005 [24] | PCN vs. CT, RCT | 50 PCN, 20 CT | C4-C7, 54 | 60 days | 80% symptom resolution in PCN, 75% persistent pain in CT | 4 reoperations |
Halim, 2017 [25] | PCN vs. PRF, RCT | 34 (17 PCN, 17 PRF) | PCN: C5-7, 17 PRF: C3-7, 17 | 3 months | VAS improvement: PCN 43.4 points, PRF 34.0 points | None |
Rooij et al., 2020 [26] | PCN vs. ACD, RCT | 48 (24 PCN, 24 ACD) | ACD: C4-C7, 24 PCN: C5-C7, 24 | 12 months | More improvement in arm pain in the ACD group | None |
RoB 2 Domains * | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
RCT | 1a | 1b | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
Rooij et al., 2020 [26] | Some concerns | High risk | Some concerns | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
Halim et al., 2017 [25] | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
Cesaroni et al., 2010 [22] | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
Birnbaum et al., 2009 [23] | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
Nardi et al., 2005 [24] | Some concerns | Some concerns | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
ROBINS-I Domains ** | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
NRS | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
De Rooij et al., 2022 [6] | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Serious risk | Moderate risk | Low risk |
Kim et al., 2022 [7] | Low risk | Moderate risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
Chen et al., 2022 [21] | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Moderate risk | Moderate risk | Low risk |
Pandolfi et al., 2021 [8] | Low risk | Moderate risk | Moderate risk | Low risk | Moderate risk | Low risk | Low risk |
Li et al., 2020 [9] | Low risk | Moderate risk | Low risk | Low risk | Moderate risk | Low risk | Low risk |
He et al., 2020 [15] | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Moderate risk | Low risk | Low risk |
Ierardi et al., 2020 [16] | Low risk | Low risk | Moderate risk | Low risk | Low risk | Moderate risk | Low risk |
Li et al., 2019 [17] | Moderate risk | Moderate risk | Low risk | Low risk | Serious risk | Low risk | Low risk |
Yang et al., 2014 [18] | Low risk | Moderate risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
Schubert et al., 2014 [19] | Low risk | Serious risk | Low risk | Low risk | Moderate risk | Low risk | Low risk |
Halim et al., 2013 [10] | Moderate risk | Moderate risk | Low risk | Low risk | Moderate risk | Low risk | Low risk |
Sim et al., 2011 [11] | Low risk | Moderate risk | Moderate risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
Timmermann et al., 2011 [12] | Moderate risk | Moderate risk | Low risk | Moderate risk | Serious risk | Moderate risk | Low risk |
Yan et al., 2010 [20] | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Moderate risk | Low risk | Low risk |
Li et al., 2008 [13] | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
Bonaldi et al., 2006 [14] | Low risk | Moderate risk | Moderate risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
Subgroup | Studies Included | Hedges’g | 95% CI | Interpretation |
---|---|---|---|---|
Short-term follow-up | Sim, 2011 [11] | 2.98 | 2.01–3.95 | Very large short-term effect |
Timmermann, 2011 [12] | 3.57 | 2.99–4.15 | Very large, short-term effect | |
Long-term follow-up | De Rooij, 2022 [6] | 0.0 | −0.15–0.15 | No long-term effect |
Kim, 2022 [7] | 1.93 | 1.43–2.43 | Moderate-to-large long term effect | |
Pandolfi, 2021 [8] | 2.36 | 1.46–3.27 | Large long-term effect | |
Li, 2020 [9] | −1.77 | −2.26–−1.28 | Negative long-term effect | |
Prospective studies | Pandolfi, 2021 [8] | 3.28 | 2.44–4.11 | Strong effect in prospective studies |
Timmermann, 2011 [12] | ||||
Retrospective studies | De Rooij, 2022 [6] | 0.07 | −0.07–0.21 | Minimal effect in restrospective studies |
Kim, 2022 [7] | ||||
Li, 2020 [9] | ||||
Sim, 2011 [11] |
Surgical Technique | Indications | Contraindications |
---|---|---|
Percutaneous Cervical Nucleoplasty (PCN) | ||
Percutaneous Cervical Discectomy (PCD) |
| |
Percutaneous Cervical Annuloplasty (PCA) |
|
|
Percutaneous Cervical Pulsed Radiofrequency (PRF) |
|
|
Study | N | Males, n (%) | Age, Years | FU, Months |
---|---|---|---|---|
De Rooij et al., 2022 [6] | 158 | 74 (46.8%) | 47.3 ± 9.1 | 41.5 |
Kim et al., 2022 [7] | 44 | 27 (61.4%) | 54.5 (range: 31.0–81.0) | 15.4 (range: 3.7–30.8) |
Pandolfi et al., 2021 [8] | 18 | 10 (55.6%) | 52.5 | 24.0 |
Sim et al., 2011 [11] | 22 | 15 (68.2%) | 47.8 ± 11.9 | 6.0 |
Timmermann et al., 2011 [12] | 32 | 7 (21.9%) | 59.1 ± 13.3 | 1.0–1.5 |
Li et al., 2008 [13] | 126 | 65 (51.6%) | 51.9 ± 10.2 | 24.0 (range: 14.0–36.0) |
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Rybaczek, M.; Mariak, Z.; Grabala, P.; Łysoń, T. Minimally Invasive Percutaneous Techniques for the Treatment of Cervical Disc Herniation: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. J. Clin. Med. 2025, 14, 3280. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14103280
Rybaczek M, Mariak Z, Grabala P, Łysoń T. Minimally Invasive Percutaneous Techniques for the Treatment of Cervical Disc Herniation: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2025; 14(10):3280. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14103280
Chicago/Turabian StyleRybaczek, Magdalena, Zenon Mariak, Paweł Grabala, and Tomasz Łysoń. 2025. "Minimally Invasive Percutaneous Techniques for the Treatment of Cervical Disc Herniation: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis" Journal of Clinical Medicine 14, no. 10: 3280. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14103280
APA StyleRybaczek, M., Mariak, Z., Grabala, P., & Łysoń, T. (2025). Minimally Invasive Percutaneous Techniques for the Treatment of Cervical Disc Herniation: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 14(10), 3280. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14103280