Asian Spine Journal (Feb 2023)

Validation of Neck Disability Index Severity among Patients Receiving One or Two-Level Anterior Cervical Surgery

  • Cara E. Geoghegan,
  • Shruthi Mohan,
  • Conor P. Lynch,
  • Elliot D. K. Cha,
  • Kevin C. Jacob,
  • Madhav R. Patel,
  • Michael C. Prabhu,
  • Nisheka N. Vanjani,
  • Hanna Pawlowski,
  • Kern Singh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.31616/asj.2021.0414
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1
pp. 86 – 95

Abstract

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Study Design Retrospective cohort. Purpose To evaluate the validity of established severity thresholds for Neck Disability Index (NDI) among patients undergoing anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) or cervical disc arthroplasty (CDA). Overview of Literature Few studies have examined the validity of established NDI threshold values among patients undergoing ACDF or CDA. Methods A surgical database was reviewed to identify patients undergoing cervical spine procedures. Demographics, operative characteristics, comorbidities, NDI, Visual Analog Scale (VAS), and 12-item Short Form (SF-12) physical and mental composite scores (PCS and MCS) were recorded. NDI severity was categorized using previously established threshold values. Improvement from preoperative scores at each postoperative timepoint and convergent validity of NDI was evaluated. Discriminant validity of NDI was evaluated against VAS neck and arm and SF-12 PCS and MCS. Results All 290 patients included in the study demonstrated significant improvements from baseline values for all patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) at all postoperative timepoints (p<0.001) except SF-12 MCS at 2 years (p=0.393). NDI showed a moderate-to-strong correlation (r≥0.419) at most timepoints for VAS neck, VAS arm, SF-12 PCS, and SF-12 MCS (p<0.001, all). NDI severity categories demonstrated significant differences in mean VAS neck, VAS arm, SF-12 PCS, and SF-12 MCS at all timepoints (p<0.001, all). Differences between NDI severity groups were not uniform for all PROMs. VAS neck values demonstrated significant intergroup differences at most timepoints, whereas SF-12 MCS showed significantly different values between most severity groups. Conclusions Neck disability is strongly correlated with neck and arm pain, physical function, and mental health and demonstrates worse outcomes with increasing severity. Previously established severity categories may be more applicable to pain than physical function or mental health and may be more uniformly applied preoperatively for cervical spine patients.

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