Table 1

Quantitative criteria to define MIS of spine: four major categories

1. Local zone of injury—less extensive collateral damage or muscle injury because of the approach
 Less area or zone of injury as assessed by postoperative cross-sectional MRI
 Less selective type II fiber atrophy on postoperative muscle biopsy
 Lower physiologic cross-sectional area reflecting less muscle strength
 Lower incidence of postoperative intracompartmental pressure, decreased perfusion, and lower oxygen saturation of the paraspinal muscle compartment
 Less intramuscular edema
 Less postoperative muscle atrophy of the multifidus, interspinales, intertransversarii, longissimus, and iliocostalis documented on muscle biopsy or less denervation by EMG
 Postoperative muscle biopsy specimens showing a lower incidence of denervation, fibrosis, and fatty infiltration
 Lower incidence of local neurologic injury (free-running EMG, MEP, SSEP) and less denervation of paraspinal musculature
 Lower incidence of intercostal neuralgia, less decrease of sympathetic trunk function, and less development of reflex sympathetic dystrophies
 Lower incidence of epidural scar formation
 Reduced anterior abdominal dissection and less vascular retraction particularly with multilevel procedures
2. Operative patient demographics that are directly dependent on the approach
 Less intraoperative estimated blood loss
 Shorter length of surgical time
 Shorter fluoroscopy time and less radiation exposure
 Lower amounts of wound drainage
 Lower incidence of postoperative seroma formation
 Fewer intraoperative complications or adverse events (dural tears, medical complications, and so on)
 Greater preservation of spinal stability by preservation of anterior and posterior longitudinal ligaments
 No or acceptable loss of sagittal or coronal balance
 Smaller zone of muscle injury or necrosis measured by creatine kinase and aldolase levels. Is there a decrease in levels of inflammatory cytokines (IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, IL-1) compared with previous techniques?
 Lower incidence of SSIs (Table 2)
3. Patient and hospitalization demographics that are indirectly related to the approach
 Shorter length of hospital stay
 Shorter length of stay in intensive care unit
 Shorter length of stay in rehabilitation hospital or skilled nursing facility
 Shorter length of time in medically supervised physical therapy before transition to self-motivated physical fitness
 Timing of neurologic decompression, particularly with staged front and back procedures
 Outcome instruments (VAS, ODI, ZCQ, SF-36, ASIA score)
 Fewer intrahospital complications, including medical and comorbidities
 Lower incidence of reoperations
4. Econometrics or global cost to society
 Faster return to work with less economic expenditures
 Improved QALYs with shorter estimated blood loss, LOS, and hospital time, without sacrificing patient outcome instruments (NDI, ODI, VAS, and so on)
 More favorable incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ie, change in cost/change in effectiveness or cost per QALY)
 MIS is a procedure that requires more dependence on radiographic imaging and intraoperative navigation for intraoperative orientation for the surgeon
 Lower cost of spinal instrumentation and spinal implants
 Less costs for intraoperative surgical navigation
 Cost of radiographic imaging and intraoperative CT scanning
 Cost of optical magnification, endoscopes, and microscopes
 Cost of patient being lost to the workforce
 Lost opportunity costs
 Learning curve of MIS and time spent adopting new MIS techniques in instructional cadaveric courses
 Ability to expand indications to include additional surgical treatment groups, such as the elderly (higher BMI, more immunocompromised, more osteoporotic, more comorbidities)
  • Abbreviations: ASIA, American Spinal Injury Association; BMI, body mass index; CT, computed tomography; EMG, electromyography; IL, interleukin; LOS; length of stay; MEP, motor evoked potentials; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; NDI, Neck Disability Index; ODI, Oswestry Disability Index; QALY, quality-adjusted life-year; SF-36, Short Form 36; SSEP, somatosensory evoked potentials; VAS, visual analog scale; ZCQ, Zurich Claudication Questionnaire.