You are currently on the new version of our website. Access the old version .
  • This is an early access version, the complete PDF, HTML, and XML versions will be available soon.
  • Article
  • Open Access

8 January 2026

Saudi Clinical Practice Guideline for the Assessment and Management of Low Back Pain and Sciatica in Adults

,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
and
1
Department of Rehabilitation Health Sciences, College of Applied Medical Science, King Saud University, Riyadh 11451, Saudi Arabia
2
Orthopedic Section, Department of Surgery, King Faisal Specialist and Research Center, Jeddah 21499, Saudi Arabia
3
Prince Sultan Military Medical City, Riyadh 12233, Saudi Arabia
4
Epistemonikos Foundation, Santiago 7510321, Chile
This article belongs to the Special Issue Evidence-Based Diagnosis and Clinical Management of Low Back Pain

Abstract

Background/Objectives: Low back pain (LBP) is the leading cause of disability in Saudi Arabia and contributes substantially to healthcare utilisation, reduced quality of life, and lost productivity. This guideline provides nationally standardised, evidence-based recommendations for the assessment and management of non-specific LBP and sciatica in adults, adapted to the clinical and health-system context in Saudi Arabia. Methods: A multidisciplinary Task Force developed the guideline using the GRADE ADOLOPMENT approach, using NICE guideline NG59 as the primary evidence source. One additional clinical question was formulated to address pain neuroscience education, informed by a relevant systematic review. Update literature searches were conducted in PubMed, Embase, and the Cochrane Library (2016–2022). The evidence was appraised using GRADE, and recommendations were formulated through structured Evidence-to-Decision deliberations and consensus voting. Results: The Task Force addressed eleven clinical questions in this guideline. Strong recommendations were provided for the use of validated risk assessment tools (very low certainty of evidence) and stratified management (moderate certainty of evidence). Conditional recommendations were made for indications for imaging, pharmacological treatment for sciatica, psychological interventions, multidisciplinary return to work programmes, epidural injections, prognostic value of image-concordant pathology, spinal decompression, radiofrequency denervation, and pain neuroscience education, with certainty of evidence ranging from very low to low. Conclusions: The findings indicate that management of non-specific LBP and sciatica in Saudi Arabia should be guided by clinical assessment, with restricted use of imaging, careful selection of pharmacological treatments, and appropriate use of psychological, multidisciplinary, and procedural interventions.

Article Metrics

Citations

Article Access Statistics

Multiple requests from the same IP address are counted as one view.