Percutaneous Balloon Kyphoplasty and Mechanical Vertebral Augmentation - CAM 60138

Description 
Percutaneous balloon kyphoplasty, radiofrequency kyphoplasty, and mechanical vertebral augmentation with Kiva are interventional techniques involving the fluoroscopically guided injection of polymethylmethacrylate into a cavity created in the vertebral body with a balloon or mechanical device. These techniques have been investigated as options to provide mechanical support and symptomatic relief in patients with osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture or those with osteolytic lesions of the spine (i.e., multiple myeloma, metastatic malignancies).

For individuals who have osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures who receive balloon kyphoplasty, or mechanical vertebral augmentation (Kiva), the evidence includes randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and meta-analyses. Relevant outcomes include symptoms, functional outcomes, quality of life, hospitalizations, and treatment-related morbidity. A meta-analysis and moderately sized unblinded RCT have compared kyphoplasty with conservative care and found short-term benefits in pain and other outcomes. Other RCTs, summarized in a meta-analysis, have reported similar outcomes for kyphoplasty and vertebroplasty. Two randomized trials that compared mechanical vertebral augmentation (Kiva) with kyphoplasty have reported similar outcomes for both procedures. A major limitation of all these RCTs is the lack of a sham procedure. Due to the possible sham effect observed in the recent trials of vertebroplasty, the validity of the results from non-sham-controlled trials is unclear. Therefore, whether these improvements represent a true treatment effect is uncertain. The evidence is insufficient to determine the effects of the technology on health outcomes.

For individuals who have osteolytic vertebral compression fractures who receive balloon kyphoplasty or mechanical vertebral augmentation (Kiva), the evidence includes RCTs, case series, and a systematic review of these studies. Relevant outcomes include symptoms, functional outcomes, quality of life, hospitalizations, and treatment-related morbidity. Two RCTs have compared balloon kyphoplasty with conservative management, and another has compared Kiva with balloon kyphoplasty. Results of these trials, along with case series, would suggest a reduction in pain, disability and analgesic use in patients with cancer-related compression fractures. However, because the results of the comparative studies of vertebroplasty have suggested possible placebo or natural history effects, the evidence these studies provide is insufficient to warrant conclusions about the effect of kyphoplasty on health outcomes. The evidence is insufficient to determine the effects of the technology on health outcomes.

After consideration of clinical input, we concluded that, although the scientific evidence does not permit conclusions about the impact on health outcomes and that comparative studies with long-term outcomes are lacking, numerous case series, including large prospective reports, have consistently shown that vertebroplasty and percutaneous balloon kyphoplasty may alleviate pain and improve function in patients with osteoporotic vertebral fractures that have failed to respond to conservative treatment (at least 6 weeks) with analgesics, physical therapy and rest. More recent randomized trials, which have compared percutaneous balloon kyphoplasty with medical management, have also reported benefit. Given the absence of alternative treatment options and the morbidity associated with extended bedrest, percutaneous balloon kyphoplasty and mechanical vertebral augmentation may be considered reasonable treatment options in patients with vertebral fractures who fail to improve after 6 weeks of conservative therapy and, therefore, may be considered medically necessary both for this patient population and populations with severe pain due to osteolytic lesions of the spine related to multiple myeloma or metastatic malignancies.

For individuals who have osteoporotic or osteolytic vertebral compression fractures who receive radiofrequency kyphoplasty, the evidence includes a systematic review and an RCT. Relevant outcomes include symptoms, functional outcomes, quality of life, hospitalizations, and treatment-related morbidity. The only RCT (N = 80) identified showed similar results between radiofrequency kyphoplasty and balloon kyphoplasty. The systematic review suggested that radiofrequency kyphoplasty is superior to balloon kyphoplasty in pain relief, but the review itself was limited by the inclusion of a small number of studies as well as possible bias. Corroboration of these results in a larger number of patients would be needed to determine with greater certainty whether radiofrequency kyphoplasty provides outcomes similar to balloon kyphoplasty. The evidence is insufficient to determine the effects of the technology on health outcomes.

Background 
Osteoporotic Vertebral Compression Fracture
Osteoporotic compression fractures are common. It is estimated that up to 50% of women and 25% of men will have a vertebral fracture at some point in their lives. However, only about one-third of vertebral fractures reach clinical diagnosis, and most symptomatic fractures will heal within a few weeks or one month. A minority of patients will exhibit chronic pain following osteoporotic compression fracture that presents challenges for medical management.

Treatment
Chronic symptoms do not tend to respond to the management strategies for acute pain such as bedrest, immobilization or bracing device, and analgesic medication, sometimes including narcotic analgesics. The source of chronic pain after vertebral compression fracture may not be from the vertebra itself but may be predominantly related to strain on muscles and ligaments secondary to kyphosis. This type of pain frequently is not improved with analgesics and may be better addressed through exercise. Conventional vertebroplasty surgical intervention may be required in severe cases not responsive to conservative measures.

Osteolytic Vertebral Body Fractures
Vertebral body fractures can also be pathologic, due to osteolytic lesions, most commonly from metastatic tumors. Metastatic malignant disease involving the spine generally involves the vertebral bodies, with pain being the most frequent complaint.

Treatment
While radiotherapy and chemotherapy are frequently effective in reducing tumor burden and associated symptoms, pain relief may be delayed days to weeks, depending on tumor response. Further, these approaches rely on bone remodeling to regain vertebral body strength, which may necessitate supportive bracing to minimize the risk of vertebral body collapse during healing.

Regulatory Status  
Kyphoplasty is a surgical procedure and, as such, is not subject to regulation by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Polymethyl methacrylate bone cement was available as a drug product before enactment of the FDA's device regulation and was at first considered what the FDA termed a "transitional device." It was transitioned to a class III device and then to a class II device, which required future 510(k) submissions to meet "special controls" instead of "general controls" to assure safety and effectiveness. In July 2004, KyphX® HV-RTM bone cement was cleared for marketing by the FDA through the 510(k) process for the treatment of pathologic fractures of the vertebral body due to osteoporosis, cancer, or benign lesions using a balloon kyphoplasty procedure. Subsequently, other products such as Spine-Fix® Biomimetic Bone Cement, KYPHON® HV-R® Bone Cement, and Osteopal® V (Heraeus) have received 510(k) marketing clearance for the fixation of pathologic fractures of the vertebral body using vertebroplasty or kyphoplasty procedures.

Balloon kyphoplasty requires the use of an inflatable bone tamp. In July 1998, one such tamp, the KyphX® inflatable bone tamp (Medtronic), was cleared for marketing by the FDA through the 510(k) process. Additional devices for balloon kyphoplasty are listed in Table 1.

There are several mechanical vertebral augmentation devices that have received marketing clearance by the FDA through the 510(k) process; these are listed in Table 1.

StabiliT® Vertebral Augmentation System (Merit Medical) for radiofrequency vertebral augmentation was cleared for marketing in 2009.

FDA product code NDN.

Table 1. Kyphoplasty and Mechanical Vertebral Augmentation Devices Cleared by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration

Device Manufacturer Date Cleared 510(k) No. Indication
Balloon Kyphoplasty        
TRACKER Plus Kyphoplasty System GS Medical Co., Ltd 10/28/2021 K211797 Reduction of fractures and/or creation of a void
Joline Kyphoplasty System Allevo Joline GmbH & Co. 5/27/2020 K192449 To repair vertebral compression fractures
TRACKER Kyphoplasty System GS Medical Co., Ltd 12/4/2019 K192335 Reduction of fractures or creation of a void
Stryker iVAS Elite Inflatable Vertebral Augmentation System (Stryker iVAS Elite Balloon Catheter) Stryker Corporation 12/21/2018 K181752 To repair vertebral compression fractures
SpineKure Kyphoplasty System Hanchang Co. Ltd. 5/29/2018 K172871 To repair vertebral compression fractures
Modified Winch Kyphoplasty (15 and 20 mm) 11 Gauge Balloon Catheters G-21 s.r.l. 8/23/2017 K172214 To repair vertebral compression fractures
13G InterV Kyphoplasty Catheter (Micro) and 11G InterV Kyphoplasty Catheter (Mini-Flex) Pan Medical Ltd. 11/1/2016 K162453 To repair vertebral compression fractures
MEDINAUT Kyphoplasty System Imedicom Co. Ltd. 7/29/2016 K153296 To repair vertebral compression fractures
AVAflex Vertebral Balloon System Carefusion 11/24/2015 K151125 To repair vertebral compression fractures
Osseoflex SB Straight Balloon 10g/4ml Osseoflex SB Straight Balloon 10g/2ml Osseon LLC 4/9/2015 K150607 To repair vertebral compression fractures
InterV Kyphoplasty Catheter (Balloon Length: 1015 and 20mm) InterV Kyphoplasty Catheter (Mini) (Balloon Length: 10 15 and 20mm) Pan Medical Ltd. 3/6/2015 K150322 To repair vertebral compression fractures
GUARDIAN-SG Inflatable Bone Expander System BM Korea Co. Ltd. 1/16/2015 K143006 To repair vertebral compression fractures
ZVPLASTY Zavation LLC 9/12/2014 K141419 To repair vertebral compression fractures
Mechanical Vertebral Augmentation        
Kiva VCF Treatment System Benvenue Medical Inc. 8/14/2014 K141141 To repair vertebral compression fractures
SpineJack Expansion Kit Vexim SA 8/30/2018 K181262 To repair vertebral compression fractures
V-Strut Vertebral Implant Hyprevention SAS 3/5/2020 K191709 Treatment of vertebral fractures in the thoracic and lumbar spine

Related Policies
60125 Percutaneous Vertebroplasty and Sacroplasty

Policy 

  1. Balloon kyphoplasty is considered MEDICALLY NECESSARY for the treatment of symptomatic thoracolumbar osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures that have failed to respond to conservative treatment (e.g., analgesics, physical therapy, rest) for at least 6 weeks.
  2. Mechanical vertebral augmentation with an FDA-cleared device (e.g., Kiva, SpineJack) is considered MEDICALLY NECESSARY for the treatment of symptomatic thoracolumbar osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures that have failed to respond to conservative treatment (e.g., analgesics, physical therapy, rest) for at least 6 weeks.
  3. Balloon kyphoplasty is considered MEDICALLY NECESSARY for the treatment of severe pain due to osteolytic lesions of the spine related to multiple myeloma or metastatic malignancies.
  4. Mechanical vertebral augmentation with an FDA-cleared device (e.g., Kiva, SpineJack) is considered MEDICALLY NECESSARY for the treatment of severe pain due to osteolytic lesions of the spine related to multiple myeloma or metastatic malignancies.
  5. Balloon kyphoplasty or mechanical vertebral augmentation with an FDA-cleared device is considered investigational/unproven therefore considered NOT MEDICALLY NECESSARY for all other indications, including use in acute vertebral fractures due to osteoporosis or trauma.
  6. Radiofrequency kyphoplasty is considered investigational/unproven therefore considered NOT MEDICALLY NECESSARY.
  7. Mechanical vertebral augmentation using any other device is considered investigational/unproven therefore considered NOT MEDICALLY NECESSARY. 

Policy Guidelines
See Table 1 for FDA-cleared devices.

Please see the Codes table for details.

Benefit Application
Based on currently available evidence, health outcomes for vertebroplasty and kyphoplasty appear to be comparable. If more costly than vertebroplasty, kyphoplasty would be considered not medically necessary using the Medical Policy Reference Manual definition of medical necessity. Benefit or contract language describing the "least costly alternative" may be applicable for this choice of treatment.

BlueCard/National Account Issues
State or federal mandates (e.g., FEP) may dictate that all devices approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) may not be considered investigational. However, this policy considers specific applications of an FDA-approved device as investigational. Alternatively, FDA-approved devices may be only assessed on the basis of their medical necessity.

Percutaneous kyphoplasty may be performed by interventional radiologists or orthopedic surgeons.

Percutaneous kyphoplasty is a specialized procedure, and thus some patients may seek out of network referral.

Rationale  
Evidence reviews assess the clinical evidence to determine whether the use of technology improves the net health outcome. Broadly defined, health outcomes are the length of life, quality of life, and ability to function, including benefits and harms. Every clinical condition has specific outcomes that are important to patients and managing the course of that condition. Validated outcome measures are necessary to ascertain whether a condition improves or worsens; and whether the magnitude of that change is clinically significant. The net health outcome is a balance of benefits and harms.

To assess whether the evidence is sufficient to draw conclusions about the net health outcome of technology, 2 domains are examined: the relevance, and quality and credibility. To be relevant, studies must represent 1 or more intended clinical use of the technology in the intended population and compare an effective and appropriate alternative at a comparable intensity. For some conditions, the alternative will be supportive care or surveillance. The quality and credibility of the evidence depend on study design and conduct, minimizing bias and confounding that can generate incorrect findings. The randomized controlled trial (RCT) is preferred to assess efficacy; however, in some circumstances, nonrandomized studies may be adequate. Randomized controlled trials are rarely large enough or long enough to capture less common adverse events and long-term effects. Other types of studies can be used for these purposes and to assess generalizability to broader clinical populations and settings of clinical practice.

The natural history of pain and disability associated with these conditions vary. Also, pain and functional ability are subjective outcomes, susceptible to placebo effects. Nonspecific or placebo effects can be quite large for an invasive procedure such as kyphoplasty for which there is no blinding.1,2 The placebo effect may be on the order of 6 to 7 mm on a 100-mm scale, for invasive procedures,1,2,3,4 and even larger effects (10%) have been observed in the sham-controlled vertebroplasty trials.5,6 Therefore, sham-controlled comparison studies are important to demonstrate the clinical effectiveness of kyphoplasty over and above any associated nonspecific or placebo effects. Adverse effects related to kyphoplasty are the primary harms to be considered. Principal safety concerns relate to the incidence and consequences of leakage of the injected polymethyl methacrylate.

Osteoporotic Vertebral Compression Fractures 
Clinical Context and Therapy Purpose
The purpose of balloon kyphoplasty or mechanical vertebral augmentation is to provide a treatment option that is an alternative to or an improvement on existing therapies in patients with osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures. 

The question addressed in this evidence review is: Does the use of balloon kyphoplasty or mechanical vertebral augmentation improve the net health outcome for individuals who have osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture? 

The following PICO was used to select literature to inform this review.

Populations
The relevant population of interest is individuals with osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture.

Interventions
The therapy being considered is balloon kyphoplasty or mechanical vertebral augmentation. The intervention involves the fluoroscopically guided injection of polymethyl methacrylate into a cavity created in the vertebral body with a balloon or mechanical device to provide support and symptomatic relief in patients. 

Balloon kyphoplasty is a variant of vertebroplasty and uses a specialized bone tamp with an inflatable balloon to expand a collapsed vertebral body as close as possible to its natural height before injection of polymethyl methacrylate. Radiofrequency kyphoplasty (also known as radiofrequency targeted vertebral augmentation) is a modification of balloon kyphoplasty. In this procedure, a small diameter articulating osteotome creates paths across the vertebra. An ultra-high viscosity cement is injected into the fractured vertebral body, and radiofrequency is used to achieve the desired consistency of the cement. The ultra-high viscosity cement is designed to restore height and alignment to the fractured vertebra, along with stabilizing the fracture. 

Kiva is another mechanical vertebral augmentation technique that uses an implant for structural support of the vertebral body to provide a reservoir for bone cement. The Kiva vertebral compression fractures treatment system consists of a shaped memory coil and an implant, which is filled with bone cement. The coil is inserted into the vertebral body over a removable guide wire. The coil reconfigures itself into a stack of loops within the vertebral body and can be customized by changing the number of loops of the coil. The implant, made from PEEK-OPTIMA™, a biocompatible polymer, is deployed over the coil. The coil is then retracted, and polymethyl methacrylate is injected through the lumen of the implant. The polymethyl methacrylate cement flows through small slots in the center of the implant, which fixes the implant to the vertebral body and contains the polymethyl methacrylate in a cylindrical column. The proposed advantage of the Kiva system is a reduction in cement leakage. 

SpineJack is a mechanical vertebral augmentation technique that utilizes bipedicular 4.2 mm to 5.0 mm self-expanding jacks to restore vertebral height. Placement of the titanium devices are verified in anteroposterior and lateral view prior to expansion. Once the devices are expanded, a proprietary bone cement is injected. The proposed benefit is greater control over expansion and greater restoration of vertebral height compared to balloon kyphoplasty. The procedure requires good bone quality.

Comparators
Comparators of interest include conservative care. Treatment includes bed rest, local and systemic analgesia, and bracing. Conventional vertebroplasty procedures may also be used to treat this condition.

Outcomes
The general outcomes of interest are symptoms, functional outcomes, quality of life, hospitalizations, and treatment-related morbidity. Kyphoplasty may also restore lost vertebral body height and reduce kyphotic deformity. Potential health outcomes related to kyphotic deformity include pulmonary or gastrointestinal compression and associated symptoms, and vertebral compression fractures may be associated with lower health-related quality of life (e.g., European Quality of Life-5 Dimensions). 

The existing literature evaluating balloon kyphoplasty or mechanical vertebral augmentation as a treatment for osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures has varying lengths of follow-up, ranging from 1 month to 4 years.

Study Selection Criteria
Methodologically credible studies were selected using the following principles: 

  • To assess efficacy outcomes, comparative controlled prospective trials were sought, with a preference for RCTs.
  • In the absence of such trials, comparative observational studies were sought, with a preference for prospective studies.
  • To assess long-term outcomes and adverse events, single-arm studies that capture longer periods of follow-up and/or larger populations were sought.
  • Studies with duplicative or overlapping populations were excluded.

Review of Evidence 
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) published a comparative effectiveness review on selected interventional treatments for acute and chronic pain in September 2021.7 The review included 37 RCTs for 10 interventional procedures and conditions that evaluated pain, function, health status, quality of life, medication use, and harm. Results of the review concluded that vertebroplasty (13 trials) was probably more effective at reducing pain and improving function in patients > 65 years of age, but benefits were small (< 1 point on a 10-point pain scale). Benefits of vertebroplasty appeared smaller in sham-controlled trials compared with trials involving usual care as a control and larger in trials involving patients with more acute symptoms. Vertebroplasty was also found to be probably not associated with an increased risk of incident vertebral fracture. Kyphopasty (2 trials) was concluded to probably be more effective than usual care for pain and function in older patients with vertebral compression fracture at up to 1 month and may be more effective at > 1 month to ≥ 1 year but has not been compared against sham therapy. The evidence regarding the risk of incident fracture with kyphoplasty was conflicting. The overall evidence base for vertebroplasty had several limitations including variations in patient selection criteria, technical factors such as volume of PMMA, and sham interventions. Usual care interventions were also not well standardized or defined and the majority of results were based on mean differences in outcomes. Few trials reported the likelihood of achieving a clinically relevant response and data on long-term outcomes were limited. For kyphoplasty, a major limitation is the absence of sham-controlled trials.

Kyphoplasty or Vertebroplasty versus Conservative Treatment
Meta-analyses 
In a Bayesian network meta-analysis, Zhao et al. (2017) examined the efficacy and safety of vertebroplasty, kyphoplasty, and conservative treatment for the treatment of osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture.8 Sixteen RCTs were identified (N = 2,046 participants; vertebroplasty, 816; kyphoplasty, 478; conservative treatment, 752). Eleven of the RCTs compared vertebroplasty with conservative treatment; 2 RCTs compared kyphoplasty with conservative treatment, and 3 RCTs compared kyphoplasty with vertebroplasty. Each trial assessed at least one of the following: visual analog scale, the Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire, the European Quality of Life-5 Dimensions, and the observance of any new fractures. No significant difference was found between kyphoplasty and vertebroplasty for pain relief, daily function and quality of life. Network meta-analysis demonstrated that kyphoplasty was superior to conservative therapy as assessed by visual analog scale (mean difference, 0.94; 95% confidence interval [CI], -0.40 to 2.39), European Quality of Life-5 Dimensions (mean difference -0.10; 95% CI, -0.17 to -0.01), and Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire (mean difference, 5.72; 95% CI, 1.05 to 10.60). Insufficient data were present to complete pairwise comparison of kyphoplasty with conservative treatment for some metrics. Kyphoplasty was associated with the lowest risk of new fractures. This review was limited by significant heterogeneity across measured outcomes and length of follow-up in studies; the presence of performing and reporting bias in studies was also a concern. 

Hinde et al. (2020) performed a meta-analysis of 7 studies on the effect of vertebral augmentation (either vertebroplasty and/or balloon kyphoplasty) compared with nonsurgical management in over 1.5 million patients with osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures.9 Compared with nonsurgical management, vertebral augmentation reduced risk of mortality (hazard ratio [HR], 0.78; 95% CI, 0.66 to 0.92). These benefits remained significant in stratified analyses of mortality over periods of 2 years (HR, 0.70; 95% CI, 0.69 to 0.71) and 5 years (HR, 0.79; 95% CI, 0.62 to 1.00). Most studies were rated with scores of 7 to 9 on the Newcastle-Ottawa rating scale. 

Sun et al. (2020) performed a meta-analysis of 32 studies (N = 945) in patients with osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture treated with vertebral augmentation or conservative treatment.10 No significant differences were observed in the risk of clinical fracture (risk ratio [RR], 1.22; 95% CI, 0.70 to 2.12) or radiological fracture (RR, 0.91; 95% CI, 0.71 to 2.12). Overall, 10 studies were rated as high quality, and the remainder were rated as low quality. Results remained consistent when stratified by RCTs and non-RCTs. 

Halvachizadeh et al. (2021) conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis comparing vertebroplasty, kyphoplasty, and nonoperative management in patients with osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures.11 A total of 16 RCTs (N = 2731 patients) were included with 11 trials comparing vertebroplasty to nonoperative management, 1 trial comparing kyphoplasty to nonoperative management, and 4 comparing kyphoplasty and vertebroplasty. Surgical intervention was associated with greater improvement of pain as compared to nonoperative management and was unrelated to the development of adjacent level fractures or quality of life. Of the trials comparing kyphoplasty and vertebroplasty, no significant differences in outcome measures were observed. Fourteen of the 16 trials provided some concern for bias, and the remaining 2 trials provided a high concern for bias. The authors noted the heterogeneity of the included studies as a limitation. Nonoperative management was not standardized and the majority of studies failed to provide evidence of osteoporosis despite indicating that the treated fractures were osteoporotic vertebral fractures. Tables 2, 3 and 4 present a comparison of studies included in the systematic reviews, review characteristics, and results, respectively.

Table 2. Comparison of Studies Included in Systematic Reviews & Meta-analyses 

Study Zhao (2017)8 Hinde (2020)9 Sun (2020)10 Halvachizadeh (2021)11
Chen (2013)  
Blasco (2012)  
Boonen (2011)      
Farrokhi (2011)  
Klazen (2010a)  
Klazen (2010b)      
Rousing (2009)  
Kallmes (2009)    
Buchbinder (2009)  
Voormolen (2006)    
Liu (2009)      
Endres (2012)      
Dohm (2014)    
Clark (2016)  
Staples (2015)    
Yang (2015)      
Berenson (2011)      
Ong (2018)      
Edidin (2015)      
Edidin (2011)      
McCullough (2013)      
Lin (2017)      
Zampini (2010)      
Lange (2014)      
McDonald (2011)      
Lavelle (2008)      
Gerling (2011)      
Becker (2011)      
Levy (2012)      
Diamond (2016)      
Klezl (2012)      
Liu (2015)      
Bornemann (2012)      
Kroon (2013)      
Diamond (2003)      
Firanescu (2018)    
Giannotti (2012)      
Grafe (2005)      
Kasperk (2010)      
Klazen (2010)      
Lee (2012)      
Rousing (2010)      
Voormolen (2007)      
Wang (2016)    
Wang (2010)      
Wardlaw (2009)    
Boonen (2011)      
Van Meirhaeghe (2013)      
Yang (2016)      
Yi (2014)      
Martinez-Ferrer (2013)      
Kroon (2013)      
Diamond (2006)      
Kasperk (2005)      
Lee (2012)      
Chen (2014)    
Du (2018)      
Firanescu (2019)      
Kroon (2014)      
Movrin (2012)      
Voormolen (2007)      
Evans (2016)      
Korovessis (2013)      
Liu (2010)      

Table 3. Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Characteristics 

Study Dates Trials Participants N (Range) Design
Zhao (2017)8 2006 – 2016 16 Patients with osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture 2046 (34 to 381) RCT
Hinde (2020)9 2010 – 2018 7 Patients with osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture 1,649,247 (40 to 378,988) Retrospective and prospective
Sun (2020)10 2005 – 2019 32 Patients with osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture 945 (34 to 300) Prospective and RCTs
Halvachizadeh (2021)11 2006 – 2019 16 Patients with osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture 2731 (34 to 381) RCT

RCT: randomized controlled trial.

Table 4. Systematic Reviews & Meta-Analyses Results 

Study VAS EQ-5D RMDQ New Fractures Mortality
Zhao (2017)8          
MD (95% CI) CT vs. KP 0.94 (-0.40 to 2.39) -0.10 (-0.17 to -0.01) 5.72 (1.05 to 10.60) 1.11 (0.46 to 2.86)  
MD (95% CI) KP vs. Vertebroplasty 0.05 (-0.18 to 0.27) -0.02 (-0.06 to 0.02) -2.50 (-3.40 to -1.60) 1.29 (0.84 to 1.99)  
Hinde (2020)9          
HR (95% CI) VA vs. CT         0.78 (0.66 to 0.92)
HR (95% CI) Balloon KP vs. Vertebroplasty         0.77 (0.77 to 0.78)
Sun (2020)10          
RR (95% CI) VA vs. CT       Clinical fracture: 1.22 (0.70 to 2.12)
Radiological fracture: 0.91 (0.71 to 2.12)
 
Halvachizadeh (2021)11   Adjacent level fractures      
VAS change: short-term; long-term (95% CI) Vertebroplasty or KP vs. CT 1.31 (0.41 to 2.21); 0.89 (0.16 to 1.62)        
p value < .0001; < .0001        
I2 99.8%; 99.2%        
VAS change: short-term; long-term (95% CI) KP vs. Vertebroplasty -0.20 (-0.34 to -0.05); -0.30 (-0.98 to 0.37)        
p value .90;.02        
I2 0%; 81.9%        
log OR (95% CI) Vertebroplasty or KP vs. CT   -0.16 (-0.83 to 0.50)      
MD (95% CI) Vertebroplasty or KP vs. CT     1.7 (0.01 to 3.47)    

CI: confidence interval; CT: conservative therapy; EQ-5D; European Quality of Life-5 Dimensions; HR: hazard ratio; KP: kyphoplasty; MD: mean difference; OR: odds ratio; RMDQ: Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire; RR: relative risk; VA: vertebral augmentation; VAS: visual analog score.

Observational Studies
Edidin et al. (2011) reported on mortality risk in Medicare patients who had osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures and had been treated with vertebroplasty, kyphoplasty or nonoperatively.12 Using the U.S. Medicare dataset, the authors identified 858,978 patients who had vertebral compression fractures between 2005 and 2008. The dataset included 119,253 kyphoplasty patients and 63,693 vertebroplasty patients. Survival was calculated from the index diagnosis date until death or the end of follow-up (up to 4 years). Cox regression analysis was used to evaluate the joint effect of multiple covariates, which included sex, age, race/ethnicity, patient health status, type of diagnosed fracture, site of service, physician specialty, socioeconomic status, year of diagnosis and census region. After adjusting for covariates, patients in the surgical cohorts (vertebroplasty or kyphoplasty) had a higher adjusted survival rate (60.8%) than patients in the nonsurgical cohort (50.0%) and were 37% less likely to die. The adjusted survival rates for vertebroplasty or kyphoplasty were 57.3% and 62.8%, respectively, a 23% lower relative risk for kyphoplasty. As noted by the authors, a causal relationship could not be determined from this study.

An industry-sponsored analysis by Ong et al. (2018) evaluated the effect of the sham-controlled vertebroplasty trials (see evidence review #6.01.25) on utilization of kyphoplasty/vertebroplasty, morbidity, and mortality in the Medicare population.13,6,5 Using the complete inpatient/outpatient U.S. Medicare data set from 2005 to 2014, the investigators evaluated utilization of vertebral augmentation procedures in patients with osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures who were treated in the 5 year period before 2009 and those who were treated in the 5 years after the sham-controlled trials were published. Use of the 2 procedures peaked at 24% of the osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture population in 2007 to 2008, then declined to 14% of osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture patients in 2014. Compared to patients with osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures treated nonsurgically, the kyphoplasty cohort (n = 261,756) had a 19% (95% CI, 19 to 19%) lower propensity-adjusted 10-year mortality risk. Compared to patients with osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture treated with vertebroplasty (n = 117,232), the kyphoplasty cohort had a 13% (95% CI, 12 to 13%) lower propensity-adjusted 10-year mortality risk. The study also found that patients treated with nonsurgical management were more likely to be discharged to nursing facilities. Although the analysis did adjust for possible confounding factors, the observational nature of the study precludes any inference of causality.

Balloon Kyphoplasty Versus Conservative Care
The largest trial of kyphoplasty versus conservative care is by Wardlaw et al. (2009), who reported the Fracture Reduction Evaluation (FREE) trial, a nonblinded industry-sponsored, multisite RCT involving 300 adults with 1 to 3 painful osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures of less than 3 months in duration.14 Twenty-four-month results were reported by Boonen et al. (2011) and by Van Meirhaeghe et al. (2013).15,16 Scores for the primary outcome, 1-month change in the 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey Physical Component Summary score, were significantly higher for those in the kyphoplasty group. The difference between groups was 5.2 points (95% CI, 2.9 to 7.4 points; p < .001). Kyphoplasty was associated with greater improvements in the 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey Physical Component Summary scores at 6-month follow-up (3.39 points), but not at 12- or 24-month follow-ups. Greater improvement in back pain was observed over 24 months for kyphoplasty (-1.49 points) and remained statistically significant at 24 months. Participants in the kyphoplasty group also reported greater improvements in quality of life and Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire scores at short-term follow-up. At 12 months, fewer kyphoplasty patients (26.4% vs. 42.1%) had received physical therapy or walking aids, back braces, wheelchairs, miscellaneous aids, or other therapy. Fewer kyphoplasty patients used opioid medications through 6 months (29.8% vs. 42.9%) and fewer pain medications through 12 months (51.7% vs. 68.3%). Other differences between groups were no longer apparent at 12 months, possibly due to natural healing of fractures. Tables 5 and 6 summarize the key characteristics and results of the FREE trial. Tables 7 and 8 detail the relevance and design/conduct limitations of the study.

Table 5. Summary of Key RCT Characteristics

Study Countries Sites Dates Participants Interventions
          Active Comparator
Wardlaw (2009), Boonen (2011), Van Meirheghe (2013)14,15,16 EU 21 2003 – 2005 Patients with 1 to 3 vertebral fractures Balloon kyphoplasty (n = 149) nonsurgical care (n = 151)

EU: European Union; RCT: randomized controlled trial.

Table 6. Summary of Key RCT Results

Study Mean SF-36 PCS Score Improvement at
1 mo (95% CI)
Difference in SF-36 Scores Between Groups at 24 mo (95% CI) Serious Adverse Events Within
30 days
Serious Adverse Events Within
12 mo
Serious Adverse Events Within 24 mo
Wardlaw (2009), Boonen (2011), Van Meirheghe (2013) 14,15,16          
Kyphoplasty 7.2 (5.7 to 8.8)   24 (16.1%) 58 (38.9%) 74 (49.7%)
Control 2 (0.4 to 3.6)   17 (11.3%) 54 (35.8%) 73 (48.3%)
MD   3.24 (1.47 to 5.01)      
p value < .0001 .0004      

CI: confidence interval; MD: mean difference; RCT: randomized controlled trial; SF-36 PCS: 36-Item Short-Form Physical Component Score.

Table 7. Study Relevance Limitations

Study Populationa Interventionb Comparatorc Outcomesd Follow.Upe
Wardlaw (2009), Boonen (2011), Van Meirheghe (2013) 14,15,16     3. nonsurgical treatment was not standardized   2. 24 mo. follow-up

The study limitations stated in this table are those notable in the current review; this is not a comprehensive gaps assessment.
a Population key: 1. Intended use population unclear; 2. Clinical context is unclear; 3. Study population is unclear; 4. Study population not representative of intended use.
b Intervention key: 1. Not clearly defined; 2. Version used unclear; 3. Delivery not similar intensity as comparator; 4. Not the intervention of interest.
c Comparator key: 1. Not clearly defined; 2. Not standard or optimal; 3. Delivery not similar intensity as intervention; 4. Not delivered effectively.
d Outcomes key: 1. Key health outcomes not addressed; 2. Physiologic measures, not validated surrogates; 3. No CONSORT reporting of harms; 4. Not establish and validated measurements; 5. Clinical significant difference not prespecified; 6. Clinical significant difference not supported.
e Follow-Up key: 1. Not sufficient duration for benefit; 2. Not sufficient duration for harms.

Table 8. Study Design and Conduct Limitations

Study Allocationa Blindingb Selective Reportingc Data Completenessd Powere Statisticalf
Wardlaw (2009), Boonen (2011), Van Meirheghe (2013) 14,15,16 3. Allocation concealment unclear 1,2. Not blinded        

The study limitations stated in this table are those notable in the current review; this is not a comprehensive gaps assessment.
a Allocation key: 1. Participants not randomly allocated; 2. Allocation not concealed; 3. Allocation concealment unclear; 4. Inadequate control for selection bias.
b Blinding key: 1. Not blinded to treatment assignment; 2. Not blinded outcome assessment; 3. Outcome assessed by treating physician.
c Selective Reporting key: 1. Not registered; 2. Evidence of selective reporting; 3. Evidence of selective publication.
d Data Completeness key: 1. High loss to follow-up or missing data; 2. Inadequate handling of missing data; 3. High number of crossovers; 4. Inadequate handling of crossovers; 5. Inappropriate exclusions; 6. Not intent to treat analysis (per protocol for noninferiority trials).
e Power key: 1. Power calculations not reported; 2. Power not calculated for primary outcome; 3. Power not based on clinically important difference.
f Statistical key: 1. Intervention is not appropriate for outcome type: (a) continuous; (b) binary; (c) time to event; 2. Intervention is not appropriate for multiple observations per patient; 3. Confidence intervals and/or p values not reported; 4. Comparative treatment effects not calculated.

Mechanical Vertebral Augmentation (e.g., Kiva or SpineJack) Versus Balloon Kyphoplasty
Vertebral augmentation with the Kiva vertebral compression fractures system was compared with balloon kyphoplasty in a pivotal noninferiority RCT reported by Tutton et al. (2015).17 This industry-sponsored, multicenter, open-label, Kiva safety and effectiveness trial was conducted in 300 patients with 1 or 2 osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures. Included were patients with visual analog scale scores for back pain of at least 70 mm (/100 mm) after 2 to 6 weeks of conservative care or visual analog scale scores of at least 50 mm after 6 weeks of conservative care, and Oswestry Disability Index scores of at least 30%. The primary composite endpoint at 12 months was a reduction in fracture pain by at least 15 mm on the visual analog scale, maintenance or improvement in function on the Oswestry Disability Index, and absence of device-related serious adverse events. The primary endpoint was met by 94.5% of patients treated with Kiva and 97.6% of patients treated with kyphoplasty (Bayesian posterior probability of 99.92% for noninferiority, using as-treated analysis). In the 285 treated patients, Kiva resulted in a mean improvement of 70.8 points in visual analog scale scores, compared with a 71.8 point improvement for kyphoplasty. There was a 38.1 point improvement in Oswestry Disability Index score for the Kiva group compared with a 42.2 point improvement for the kyphoplasty group. There were no device-related serious adverse events. The total volume of cement was 50% less with Kiva, and there was less cement extravasation (16.9%) compared with kyphoplasty (25.8%).

Korovessis et al. (2013) reported on a randomized trial of 180 patients with osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures that compared mechanical vertebral augmentation with the Kiva device with balloon kyphoplasty in 180 patients with osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures.18 The groups showed similar improvements in visual analog scale scores for back pain, 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey scores, and Oswestry Disability Index scores. For example, there was a more than 5.5 point improvement in visual analog scale scores in 54% of patients in the Kiva group and 43% of patients in the balloon kyphoplasty group. Radiologic measures of vertebral height were similar in both groups. Kiva reduced the Gardner kyphotic angle, while residual kyphosis of more than 5° was more frequently observed in the balloon kyphoplasty group. Patients and outcome assessors were reported to be unaware of group assignments, although it is not clear if the Kiva device was visible on radiographs. Cement leakage into the canal only occurred in 2 patients treated with balloon kyphoplasty, necessitating decompression, compared with none following the Kiva procedure.

Noriega et al. (2019) reported the pivotal multicenter non-inferiority trial of the SpineJack vertebral augmentation system.19 Patients (N =152) with osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures less than 3 months old were randomized to treatment with SpineJack or balloon kyphoplasty. The primary outcome was a composite measure that included improvement in visual analog scale for pain of greater than 20 mm, maintenance or improvement in Oswestry Disability Index, and lack of adverse events. Vertebral height was prespecified to be included if the primary outcome was achieved. Non-inferiority was achieved with 89.8% of SpineJack patients achieving the composite of clinical success compared to 87.3% for balloon kyphoplasty (Table 10). When including the restoration of vertebral body height, the SpineJack procedure was found to be superior to balloon kyphoplasty at 6 months (88.1% vs. 60.9%) and 12 months (79.7% vs. 59.3%, p < .001). There was also a reduction in adjacent vertebral fractures with the mechanical augmentation system (12.9% vs. 27.3%; p = .043). Interpretation of this study is limited by the lack of a sham control group.

Table 9. Summary of Key RCT Characteristics

Study Countries Sites Dates Participants Interventions  
          Active Comparator
Tutton (2015)17 U.S., EU 21 2010 – 2013 Patients with OVCF Kiva (n = 153) BK (n = 147)
Korovessis (2013)18 Greece 1 2010 – 2011 Patients with OVCF Kiva (n = 82 patients, 133 fractures) BK (n = 86 patients, 122 fractures)
Noriega et al. (2019)19 EU 13 2015 – 2017 Patients with OVCF aged < 3 mo and loss of height ≥ 15% but ≤ 40%, VAS ≥ 50 mm and ODI ≥ 30% SpineJack (n = 77, 68 in mITT) BK (n = 75, 73 in mITT)

BK: balloon kyphoplasty; EU: European Union; mITT; modified intention-to-treat; ODI: Oswestry Disability Index; OVCF: osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture; RCT: randomized controlled trial; VAS: visual analog score.

Table 10. Summary of Key RCT Results

Study Improvement in VAS Score at 12 mo. Improvement in ODI at 12 mo   Restoration of VBH Percent Success
        Anterior VAS Improvement of 5.5 Points
Tutton (2015)17
Kiva 70.8 38.1      
BK 71.8 42.2      
Korovessis (2013)18
Kiva       24% 44 (54%)
BK       23% 37 (43%)
p value       .97  
  Improvement in VAS at 1 mo + SD Improvement in ODI at 1 mo + SD Improvement in EQ-5D at 1 mo + SD Midline + SD Percent Achieving CCS (95% CI)
Noriega et al. (2019) 19
Spine-Jack 56.4 ± 20.3 44.2 ± 21.2 0.45 ± 0.29 1.31 ± 2.58 89.8% (82.1% – 97.5%)
BK 47.8 ± 25.7 39.9 ± 23.7 0.42 ± 0.29 0.10 ± 2.34 87.3% (78.5% – 96.1%)
p value .029 .321 .598 .0035 .0016

BK: balloon kyphoplasty; CCS: composite clinical success; CI: confidence interval; EQ-5D: EuroQol 5-domain questionnaire; ODI: Oswestry Disability Index; RCT: randomized controlled trial; SD: standard deviation; VAS: visual analog scale; VBH: vertebral body height.
Composite clinical success included greater than 20 mm improvement in VAS, maintenance or improvement in ODI, and absence of adverse events.

Table 11. Study Design and Conduct Limitations

Study Allocationa Blindingb Selective Reportingc Data Completenessd Powere Statisticalf
Tutton (2015)17 2. Allocation not concealed throughout study 1,2. Patients only blinded prior to procedure performance     2. Study not powered for primary or secondary endpoint  
Korovessis (2013)18   1,2. Not blinded        
Noriega et al. (2019) 19   1. Not blinded for patient-reported outcomes. Radiographic assessments were blinded.        

The study limitations stated in this table are those notable in the current review; this is not a comprehensive gaps assessment.
a Allocation key: 1. Participants not randomly allocated; 2. Allocation not concealed; 3. Allocation concealment unclear; 4. Inadequate control for selection bias.
b Blinding key: 1. Not blinded to treatment assignment; 2. Not blinded outcome assessment; 3. Outcome assessed by treating physician.
c Selective Reporting key: 1. Not registered; 2. Evidence of selective reporting; 3. Evidence of selective publication.
d Data Completeness key: 1. High loss to follow-up or missing data; 2. Inadequate handling of missing data; 3. High number of crossovers; 4. Inadequate handling of crossovers; 5. Inappropriate exclusions; 6. Not intent to treat analysis (per protocol for noninferiority trials).
e Power key: 1. Power calculations not reported; 2. Power not calculated for primary outcome; 3. Power not based on clinically important difference.
f Statistical key: 1. Intervention is not appropriate for outcome type: (a) continuous; (b) binary; (c) time to event; 2. Intervention is not appropriate for multiple observations per patient; 3. Confidence intervals and/or p values not reported; 4. Comparative treatment effects not calculated.

Section Summary: Osteoporotic Vertebral Compression Fractures
An AHRQ review concluded that vertebroplasty was probably more effective at reducing pain and improving function in patients > 65 years of age, but benefits were small (< 1 point on a 10 point pain scale). Kyphopasty was found to be probably more effective than usual care for pain and function in older patients with vertebral compression fracture at up to 1 month and may be more effective at > 1 month to ≥ 1 year but has not been compared against sham therapy. The review found that the overall evidence base for vertebroplasty had several limitations while the absence of sham-controlled trials is a major limitation for kyphoplasty.

A moderately sized unblinded RCT reported short-term benefits of kyphoplasty for pain and other outcomes in patients with painful osteoporotic fractures compared with conservative care. One systematic review of RCTs found no significant difference in subsequent fracture between vertebroplasty and conservative treatment, and another systematic review of prospective and retrospective studies reported improved mortality with either vertebroplasty or balloon kyphoplasty compared with conservative treatment. Other relevant studies, including additional RCTs and meta-analysis studies, found similar outcomes for kyphoplasty and vertebroplasty.

For mechanical vertebral augmentation with Kiva and SpineJack, evidence includes industry-sponsored, multicenter investigational device exemption trials and a large independent randomized trial. These randomized comparative trials showed outcomes similar between Kiva and kyphoplasty. Mechanical vertebral augmentation with SpineJack was found to be non-inferior to balloon kyphoplasty for success on a composite outcome measure and superior to balloon kyphoplasty when vertebral height restoration was included in the composite. A major limitation of all these RCTs is the lack of a sham procedure. Due to the possible sham effect observed in the trials of vertebroplasty, the validity of the results from non-sham-controlled trials is unclear. Therefore, whether these improvements represent a true treatment effect is uncertain.

Osteolytic Vertebral Compression Fractures
Clinical Context and Therapy Purpose
The purpose of balloon kyphoplasty or mechanical vertebral augmentation is to provide a treatment option that is an alternative to or an improvement on existing therapies, such as conservative care, in patients with osteolytic vertebral compression fractures.

The question addressed in this evidence review is: Does the use of balloon kyphoplasty or mechanical vertebral augmentation improve the net health outcome for individuals who have osteolytic vertebral compression fractures?

The following PICO was used to select literature to inform this review.

Populations
The relevant population of interest is individuals with osteolytic vertebral compression fractures.

Interventions
The therapy being considered is balloon kyphoplasty or mechanical vertebral augmentation. The intervention involves the fluoroscopically guided injection of polymethyl methacrylate into a cavity created in the vertebral body with a balloon or mechanical device to provide support and symptomatic relief in patients.

Comparators
Comparators of interest include conservative care. Treatment includes bed rest, local and systemic analgesia, and bracing.

Outcomes
The general outcomes of interest are symptoms, functional outcomes, quality of life, hospitalizations, and treatment-related morbidity.

Table 12. Outcomes of Interest for Individuals with Osteolytic Vertebral Compression Fractures

Outcomes Details
Quality of life Reduced pain, disability, and analgesic use in patients

The existing literature evaluating balloon kyphoplasty or mechanical vertebral augmentation as a treatment for osteolytic vertebral compression fracture has varying lengths of follow-up. At least 1 year of follow-up for the primary outcome is necessary to adequately assess outcomes.

Study Selection Criteria
Methodologically credible studies were selected using the following principles:

  • To assess efficacy outcomes, comparative controlled prospective trials were sought, with a preference for RCTs.
  • In the absence of such trials, comparative observational studies were sought, with a preference for prospective studies.
  • To assess long-term outcomes and adverse events, single-arm studies that capture longer periods of follow-up and/or larger populations were sought.
  • Studies with duplicative or overlapping populations were excluded.

Review of Evidence
Systematic Reviews
In a systematic review, Health Quality Ontario (2016) assessed vertebral augmentation for cancer-related vertebral compression fractures.20 The assessment identified 33 reports with 1,690 patients who were treated with kyphoplasty for spinal metastatic cancers, multiple myeloma or hemangiomas. For cancer-related vertebral compression fractures there were 5 case series (110 patients) on multiple myeloma and 6 reports (2 RCTs, 4 case series; 308 patients) on mixed cancers with spinal metastases. Vertebral augmentation resulted in reductions in pain intensity scores, opioid or other analgesic use, and disability scores. One RCT (N = 129) compared kyphoplasty with nonsurgical management for cancer-related vertebral compression fractures, reporting that pain scores, pain-related disability, and health-related quality of life were significantly improved in the kyphoplasty group than in the usual care group. The second RCT compared the Kiva device with kyphoplasty in 47 patients with cancer-related compression fractures, finding no significant differences between groups for improvements in visual analog scale pain and Oswestry Disability Index scores.

Mattie et al. (2021) conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of 7 RCTs (N = 476) that compared the magnitude and duration of pain relief with vertebral augmentation (i.e., balloon kyphoplasty or percutaneous vertebroplasty), with or without additional therapy, to any other intervention or placebo/sham for the treatment of cancer-related vertebral compression fractures.21 In 5 of the 7 studies, vertebral augmentation alone comprised 1 group; comparative treatments included nonsurgical management, Kiva implantation, and combinations of percutaneous vertebroplasty and radiofrequency therapy, chemotherapy, instrasomatic steroid injection, or 125I seeds. Results revealed an overall positive and statistically significant effect of vertebral augmentation for the management of cancer-related vertebral compression fractures. This effect was particularly pronounced when comparing vertebral augmentation to nonsurgical management, radiofrequency ablation, or chemotherapy alone. The authors noted that there was much heterogeneity among the included studies regarding the treatment methods in the control groups and 1 study allowed patients to crossover to the intervention group, potentially leading to biased results.

Randomized Controlled Trials
The only RCT to compare kyphoplasty to nonsurgical management was an international multicenter study reported by Berenson et al. (2011).22 The trial enrolled 134 patients with cancer who had at least 1 and not more than 3 painful osteolytic vertebral compression fractures. The primary outcome was change in functional status from baseline at 1 month as measured by the Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire. Treatment allocation was not blinded, and the primary outcome at 1 month was analyzed using all participants with data both at baseline and at 1 month. Participants needed to have a pain score of at least 4, on a 0-to-10 scale. Crossover to the balloon kyphoplasty arm was allowed after 1 month. Reviewers reported scores for the kyphoplasty and nonsurgical groups of 17.6 and 18.2 at baseline, respectively, and 9.1 and 18.0 at 1-month follow-up (between-group difference in scores, p < .001).

Korovessis et al. (2014) compared the efficacy of Kiva and kyphoplasty in an RCT with 47 participants with osteolytic vertebral compression fractures.23 Oswestry Disability Index scores improved by 42 and 43 points in the kyphoplasty and Kiva groups, respectively. Pain scores improved by 5.1 points in both groups, from baseline mean scores of 8.1 (kyphoplasty) and 8.3 (Kiva).

Section Summary: Osteolytic Vertebral Compression Fractures
Results of an RCT, systematic reviews, and case series suggest vertebral augmentation reduces pain, disability, and analgesic use in patients with cancer-related compression fractures. However, because the results of the comparative studies of vertebroplasty have also suggested a possible placebo effect, the evidence provided is insufficient to warrant conclusions about the effect of kyphoplasty on health outcomes.

Radiofrequency Kyphoplasty
Clinical Context and Therapy Purpose
The purpose of radiofrequency kyphoplasty is to provide a treatment option that is an alternative to or an improvement on existing therapies, such as conservative care, in patients with osteoporotic or osteolytic vertebral compression fractures.

The question addressed in this evidence review is: Does the use of radiofrequency kyphoplasty improve the net health outcome for individuals who have osteoporotic or osteolytic vertebral compression fractures?

The following PICO was used to select literature to inform this review.

Populations
The relevant population of interest is individuals with osteoporotic or osteolytic vertebral compression fractures.

Interventions
The therapy being considered is radiofrequency kyphoplasty. The intervention uses radiofrequency energy to ablate metastatic malignant lesions in a vertebral body to provide symptomatic relief.

Comparators
Comparators of interest include conservative care. Treatment includes bed rest, local and systemic analgesia, and bracing.

Outcomes
The general outcomes of interest are symptoms, functional outcomes, quality of life, hospitalizations, and treatment-related morbidity.

Table 13. Outcomes of Interest for Individuals with Osteoporotic or Osteolytic Vertebral Compression Fractures

Outcomes Details
Quality of life Reduced pain, disability and analgesic use in patients

The existing literature evaluating radiofrequency kyphoplasty as a treatment for osteoporotic or osteolytic vertebral compression fractures has varying lengths of follow-up, ranging from 36 to 80 months. While studies described below all reported at least 1 outcome of interest, longer follow-up is necessary to fully observe outcomes.

Study Selection Criteria
Methodologically credible studies were selected using the following principles:

  • To assess efficacy outcomes, comparative controlled prospective trials were sought, with a preference for RCTs.
  • In the absence of such trials, comparative observational studies were sought, with a preference for prospective studies.
  • To assess long-term outcomes and adverse events, single-arm studies that capture longer periods of follow-up and/or larger populations were sought.
  • Studies with duplicative or overlapping populations were excluded.

Review of Evidence
Systematic Reviews
Feng et al. (2017) performed a meta-analysis comparing radiofrequency kyphoplasty with balloon kyphoplasty in patients with vertebral compression fractures.24 Six studies (N = 833 patients) evaluating vertebral compression fractures were identified. The main outcomes were pain relief (visual analog scale), functionality improvement (Oswestry Disability Index), operation time, reduction of deformity (i.e., the restoration of vertebral height and kyphosis angle) and incidence of cement leakage. Visual analog score improved for both groups after the respective procedure; however, visual analog scale score dropped 3.96 points more in the radiofrequency kyphoplasty group (95% CI, 1.67 to 6.24; p = .001), with improvement persisting until the 12-month mark. While functionality improvement was initially improved more after radiofrequency kyphoplasty than balloon kyphoplasty (p = .04), the difference between the 2 groups was not significant after a year (p = .6). No significant difference in cement leakage between groups was observed. This review was limited by the small number of studies included as well as the presence of significant bias within these studies.

Randomized Controlled Trials
Petersen et al. (2016) reported on an RCT with 80 patients that compared radiofrequency kyphoplasty with balloon kyphoplasty.25 Patients had been admitted to the hospital for severe back pain and met the criteria for surgery after failed conservative treatment. All had osteoporotic compression fractures. Before treatment, visual analog scale pain scores on movement were similar in both groups (8.4 in the balloon kyphoplasty group vs. 8.0 in the radiofrequency kyphoplasty group). Postoperatively, visual analog scores improved by 4.6 after balloon kyphoplasty and 4.4 after radiofrequency kyphoplasty (p = not significant ). Pain at 12 months also did not differ significantly between both groups, with 58% of patients in the balloon kyphoplasty group and 66% of patients in the radiofrequency kyphoplasty group reporting no to mild pain on movement (p = not significant). There was a trend for greater restoration of the kyphosis angle.

Section Summary: Radiofrequency Kyphoplasty
For radiofrequency kyphoplasty, the evidence includes a meta-analysis and a RCT. While the RCT showed similar results compared with balloon kyphoplasty, an improvement in immediate pain relief after RCT was noted in the meta-analysis. Further high-quality studies are needed to determine with greater certainty whether radiofrequency kyphoplasty has outcomes similar to balloon kyphoplasty.

Adverse Events
Yi et al. (2014) assessed the occurrence of new vertebral compression fractures after treatment with cement augmenting procedures (vertebroplasty or kyphoplasty) versus conservative treatment in an RCT with 290 patients (363 affected vertebrae).26 Surgically treated patients were discharged the next day. Patients treated conservatively (pain medication, bed rest, a body brace, physical therapy) had a mean length of stay of 13.7 days. Return to usual activity occurred at 1 week for 87.6% of surgically treated patients and 2 months for 59.2% of conservatively treated patients. All patients were evaluated with radiographs and magnetic resonance imaging at 6 months and then at yearly intervals until the last follow-up session. At a mean follow-up of 49.4 months (range, 36 to 80 months), 10.7% of patients had experienced 42 new symptomatic vertebral compression fractures. There was no significant difference in the incidence of new vertebral fractures between the operative (n = 18; 9 adjacent, 9 nonadjacent) and conservative (n = 24; 5 adjacent, 16 nonadjacent, 3 same level) groups, but the mean time to a new fracture was significantly shorter in the surgical group (9.7 months) compared with the nonoperative group (22.4 months).

Summary of Evidence
For individuals who have osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture who receive balloon kyphoplasty, or mechanical vertebral augmentation, the evidence includes an AHRQ comparative effectiveness review, RCTs, and meta-analyses. Relevant outcomes include symptoms, functional outcomes, quality of life, hospitalizations and treatment-related morbidity. The AHRQ review concluded that vertebroplasty was probably more effective at reducing pain and improving function in patients > 65 years of age, but benefits were small. Kyphopasty was found to be probably more effective than usual care for pain and function in older patients with vertebral compression fracture at up to 1 month and may be more effective at > 1 month to ≥ 1 year but has not been compared against sham therapy. A meta-analysis and moderately sized unblinded RCT have compared kyphoplasty with conservative care and found short-term benefits in pain and other outcomes. One systematic review of RCTs found no significant difference in subsequent fracture between vertebroplasty and conservative treatment, and another systematic review of prospective and retrospective studies reported improved mortality with either vertebroplasty or balloon kyphoplasty compared with conservative treatment. Other RCTs, summarized in a meta-analysis, have reported similar outcomes for kyphoplasty and vertebroplasty. Three randomized trials that compared mechanical vertebral augmentation (Kiva or SpineJack) with kyphoplasty have reported similar outcomes for both procedures. A major limitation of all these RCTs is the lack of a sham procedure. Due to the possible sham effect observed in the recent trials of vertebroplasty, the validity of the results from non-sham-controlled trials is unclear. Therefore, whether these improvements represent a true treatment effect is uncertain. The evidence is insufficient to determine that the technology results in an improvement in the net health outcome.

For individuals who have osteolytic vertebral compression fracture who receive balloon kyphoplasty or mechanical vertebral augmentation, the evidence includes RCTs, case series and systematic reviews of these studies. Relevant outcomes include symptoms, functional outcomes, quality of life, hospitalizations and treatment-related morbidity. Two RCTs have compared balloon kyphoplasty with conservative management, and another has compared Kiva with balloon kyphoplasty. Results of these trials, along with case series, would suggest a reduction in pain, disability and analgesic use in patients with cancer-related compression fractures. However, because the results of the comparative studies of vertebroplasty have suggested possible placebo or natural history effects, the evidence these studies provide is insufficient to warrant conclusions about the effect of kyphoplasty on health outcomes. The evidence is insufficient to determine that the technology results in an improvement in the net health outcome.

For individuals who have osteoporotic or osteolytic vertebral compression fracture who receive radiofrequency kyphoplasty, the evidence includes a systematic review and an RCT. Relevant outcomes include symptoms, functional outcomes, quality of life, hospitalizations, and treatment-related morbidity. The only RCT (N = 80) identified showed similar results between radiofrequency kyphoplasty and balloon kyphoplasty. The systematic review suggested that radiofrequency kyphoplasty is superior to balloon kyphoplasty in pain relief, but the review itself was limited by the inclusion of a small number of studies as well as possible bias. Corroboration of these results in a larger number of patients would be needed to determine with greater certainty whether radiofrequency kyphoplasty provides outcomes similar to balloon kyphoplasty. The evidence is insufficient to determine that the technology results in an improvement in the net health outcome.

The purpose of the following information is to provide reference material. Inclusion does not imply endorsement or alignment with the evidence review conclusions.

Clinical Input From Physician Specialty Societies and Academic Medical Centers
While the various physician specialty societies and academic medical centers may collaborate with and make recommendations during this process, through the provision of appropriate reviewers, input received does not represent an endorsement or position statement by the physician specialty societies or academic medical centers, unless otherwise noted.

2014 Input
In response to requests, input was received from 2 physician specialty societies and 3 academic medical centers while this policy was under review in 2014. Input was sought on the treatment of acute vertebral fractures when severe pain has led to hospitalization or persists at a level that prevents ambulation, and on the treatment of traumatic fractures that have remained symptomatic after 6 weeks of conservative treatment. Clinical input on these issues was mixed.

Practice Guidelines and Position Statements
Guidelines or position statements will be considered for inclusion in ‘Supplemental Information’ if they were issued by, or jointly by, a U.S. professional society, an international society with U.S. representation, or National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE). Priority will be given to guidelines that are informed by a systematic review, include strength of evidence ratings, and include a description of management of conflict of interest.

American College of Radiology et al.
The American College of Radiology (2014) and 7 other surgical and radiologic specialty associations published a joint position statement on percutaneous vertebral augmentation.27 This document stated that percutaneous vertebral augmentation, using vertebroplasty or kyphoplasty and performed in a manner consistent with public standards, is a safe, efficacious, and durable procedure in appropriate patients with symptomatic osteoporotic and neoplastic fractures. The statement also indicated that these procedures be offered only when nonoperative medical therapy has not provided adequate pain relief, or pain is significantly altering the patient's quality of life.

A joint practice parameter for the performance of vertebral augmentation was updated in 2017.28

Society of Interventional Radiology
In a quality improvement guideline on percutaneous vertebroplasty from the Society of Interventional Radiology (2014), vertebral augmentation was recommended for compression fractures refractory to medical therapy.27 Failure of medical therapy includes the following situations:

  1. Patients who are "rendered nonambulatory as a result of pain from a weakened or fractured vertebral body, pain persisting at a level that prevents ambulation despite 24 hours of analgesic therapy"
  2. Patients with "sufficient pain from a weakened or fractured vertebral body that physical therapy is intolerable, pain persisting at that level despite 24 hours of analgesic therapy"
  3. Patients with "a weakened or fractured vertebral body, unacceptable side effects such as excessive sedation, confusion, or constipation as a result of the analgesic therapy necessary to reduce pain to a tolerable level"

American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons
The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (2010) approved clinical guidelines on the treatment of osteoporotic spinal compression fractures, which had a weak recommendation for offering kyphoplasty to patients who "present with an osteoporotic spinal compression fracture on imaging with correlating clinical signs and symptoms ... and who are neurologically intact."29 The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons indicated that future evidence could overturn existing evidence and that the quality of the current literature is poor. These recommendations were based on the literature reviewed through September 2009.

National Institute for Health and Care Excellence
The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (2013) issued a guidance that recommended percutaneous vertebroplasty and percutaneous balloon kyphoplasty as treatment options for osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures in persons having severe, ongoing pain after a recent unhealed vertebral fracture, despite optimal pain management, and whose pain has been confirmed through physical exam and imaging at the level of the fracture.30 This guidance did not address balloon kyphoplasty with stenting, because the manufacturer of the stenting system (Synthes) stated there is limited evidence for vertebral body stenting given that the system had only recently become available.

The Institute (2008) issued guidance on the diagnosis and management of adults with metastatic spinal cord compression. It was last reviewed in 2019, and a decision was made that the guideline required updating as "since its publication, there have been advances in the diagnosis and management of metastatic spinal cord compression."31 The guidance currently still states that vertebroplasty or kyphoplasty should be considered for patients who have vertebral metastases, and no evidence of spinal cord compression or spinal instability if they have mechanical pain resistant to conventional pain management and vertebral body collapse. Surgery should only be performed when all appropriate specialists agree. Despite a relatively small sample base, the Institute concluded the evidence suggests, in a select subset of patients, that early surgery may be more effective at maintaining mobility than radiotherapy.

U.S. Preventive Services Task Force Recommendations
Not applicable.

Ongoing and Unpublished Clinical Trials
Some currently ongoing and unpublished trials that might influence this review are listed in Table 14.

Table 14. Summary of Key Trials

NCT No. Trial Name Planned Enrollment Completion Date
Ongoing      
NCT03730207a A Prospective, 1: 1 Randomized, Single Blind, Multi-center Human Clinical Trial 180 Jan. 2022
NCT02700308 A Randomized, Multicenter, Open-label, Bayesian-based Phase II Study of the Feasibility of Kyphoplasty in the Local Treatment of Spine Metastases From Solid Tumors 60 Sept. 2022
Unpublished      
NCT04581707 Evaluation of Surgical Therapy of Vertebral Compression Fractures With the Kyphoplasty Single Balloon Catheter Allevo (Joline®) and the Quattroplasty Double Balloon Catheter Stop'n GO (Joline®) With BonOs® Inject Bone Cement 80 Oct. 2021

NCT: national clinical trial.
Denotes industry-sponsored or cosponsored trial.

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  5. Buchbinder R, Osborne RH, Ebeling PR, et al. A randomized trial of vertebroplasty for painful osteoporotic vertebral fractures. N Engl J Med. Aug 06 2009; 361(6): 557-68. PMID 19657121
  6. Kallmes DF, Comstock BA, Heagerty PJ, et al. A randomized trial of vertebroplasty for osteoporotic spinal fractures. N Engl J Med. Aug 06 2009; 361(6): 569-79. PMID 19657122
  7. Chou R, Fu R, Dana T, et al. Interventional treatments for acute and chronic pain: systematic review [Internet]. AHRQ Comparative Effectiveness Reviews. Rockville (MD): Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; 2021 Sep. Report No.: 21-EHC030
  8. Zhao S, Xu CY, Zhu AR, et al. Comparison of the efficacy and safety of 3 treatments for patients with osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures: A network meta-analysis. Medicine (Baltimore). Jun 2017; 96(26): e7328. PMID 28658144
  9. Hinde K, Maingard J, Hirsch JA, et al. Mortality Outcomes of Vertebral Augmentation (Vertebroplasty and/or Balloon Kyphoplasty) for Osteoporotic Vertebral Compression Fractures: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Radiology. Apr 2020; 295(1): 96-103. PMID 32068503
  10. Sun HB, Jing XS, Tang H, et al. Clinical and radiological subsequent fractures after vertebral augmentation for treating osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures: a meta-analysis. Eur Spine J. Oct 2020; 29(10): 2576-2590. PMID 32776263
  11. Halvachizadeh S, Stalder AL, Bellut D, et al. Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of 3 Treatment Arms for Vertebral Compression Fractures: A Comparison of Improvement in Pain, Adjacent-Level Fractures, and Quality of Life Between Vertebroplasty, Kyphoplasty, and Nonoperative Management. JBJS Rev. Oct 25 2021; 9(10). PMID 34695056
  12. Edidin AA, Ong KL, Lau E, et al. Mortality risk for operated and nonoperated vertebral fracture patients in the medicare population. J Bone Miner Res. Jul 2011; 26(7): 1617-26. PMID 21308780
  13. Ong KL, Beall DP, Frohbergh M, et al. Were VCF patients at higher risk of mortality following the 2009 publication of the vertebroplasty "sham" trials?. Osteoporos Int. Feb 2018; 29(2): 375-383. PMID 29063215
  14. Wardlaw D, Cummings SR, Van Meirhaeghe J, et al. Efficacy and safety of balloon kyphoplasty compared with nonsurgical care for vertebral compression fracture (FREE): a randomised controlled trial. Lancet. Mar 21 2009; 373(9668): 1016-24. PMID 19246088
  15. Boonen S, Van Meirhaeghe J, Bastian L, et al. Balloon kyphoplasty for the treatment of acute vertebral compression fractures: 2-year results from a randomized trial. J Bone Miner Res. Jul 2011; 26(7): 1627-37. PMID 21337428
  16. Van Meirhaeghe J, Bastian L, Boonen S, et al. A randomized trial of balloon kyphoplasty and nonsurgical management for treating acute vertebral compression fractures: vertebral body kyphosis correction and surgical parameters. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). May 20 2013; 38(12): 971-83. PMID 23446769
  17. Tutton SM, Pflugmacher R, Davidian M, et al. KAST Study: The Kiva System As a Vertebral Augmentation Treatment-A Safety and Effectiveness Trial: A Randomized, Noninferiority Trial Comparing the Kiva System With Balloon Kyphoplasty in Treatment of Osteoporotic Vertebral Compression Fractures. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). Jun 15 2015; 40(12): 865-75. PMID 25822543
  18. Korovessis P, Vardakastanis K, Repantis T, et al. Balloon kyphoplasty versus KIVA vertebral augmentation--comparison of 2 techniques for osteoporotic vertebral body fractures: a prospective randomized study. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). Feb 15 2013; 38(4): 292-9. PMID 23407406
  19. Noriega D, Marcia S, Theumann N, et al. A prospective, international, randomized, noninferiority study comparing an implantable titanium vertebral augmentation device versus balloon kyphoplasty in the reduction of vertebral compression fractures (SAKOS study). Spine J. Nov 2019; 19(11): 1782-1795. PMID 31325625
  20. Pron G, Holubowich C, Kaulback K. Vertebral Augmentation Involving Vertebroplasty or Kyphoplasty for Cancer-Related Vertebral Compression Fractures: A Systematic Review. Ont Health Technol Assess Ser. 2016; 16(11): 1-202. PMID 27298655
  21. Mattie R, Brar N, Tram JT, et al. Vertebral Augmentation of Cancer-Related Spinal Compression Fractures: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). Dec 15 2021; 46(24): 1729-1737. PMID 33958537
  22. Berenson J, Pflugmacher R, Jarzem P, et al. Balloon kyphoplasty versus nonsurgical fracture management for treatment of painful vertebral body compression fractures in patients with cancer: a multicentre, randomised controlled trial. Lancet Oncol. Mar 2011; 12(3): 225-35. PMID 21333599
  23. Korovessis P, Vardakastanis K, Vitsas V, et al. Is Kiva implant advantageous to balloon kyphoplasty in treating osteolytic metastasis to the spine? Comparison of 2 percutaneous minimal invasive spine techniques: a prospective randomized controlled short-term study. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). Feb 15 2014; 39(4): E231-9. PMID 24253785
  24. Feng L, Shen JM, Feng C, et al. Comparison of radiofrequency kyphoplasty (RFK) and balloon kyphoplasty (BKP) in the treatment of vertebral compression fractures: A meta-analysis. Medicine (Baltimore). Jun 2017; 96(25): e7150. PMID 28640091
  25. Petersen A, Hartwig E, Koch EM, et al. Clinical comparison of postoperative results of balloon kyphoplasty (BKP) versus radiofrequency-targeted vertebral augmentation (RF-TVA): a prospective clinical study. Eur J Orthop Surg Traumatol. Jan 2016; 26(1): 67-75. PMID 26482590
  26. Yi X, Lu H, Tian F, et al. Recompression in new levels after percutaneous vertebroplasty and kyphoplasty compared with conservative treatment. Arch Orthop Trauma Surg. Jan 2014; 134(1): 21-30. PMID 24287674
  27. Baerlocher MO, Saad WE, Dariushnia S, et al. Quality improvement guidelines for percutaneous vertebroplasty. J Vasc Interv Radiol. Feb 2014; 25(2): 165-70. PMID 24238815
  28. ACR-ASNR-ASSR-SIR-SNIS Practice Parameter for the Performance of Vertebral Augmentation. Available at https://www.acr.org/-/media/ACR/Files/Practice-Parameters/VerebralAug.pdf. Accessed February 16, 2022.
  29. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS). The treatment of symptomatic osteoporotic spinal compression fractures: Summary of Recommendations. 2010; https://www.mainegeneral.org/app/files/public/921/aaossummary.pdf. Accessed February 16, 2022.
  30. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE). Percutaneous vertebroplasty and percutaneous balloon kyphoplasty for treating osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures [TA279]. 2013; https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ta279. Accessed February 16, 2022.
  31. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE). Metastatic spinal cord compression in adults: risk assessment, diagnosis and management [CG75]. 2008; https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg75/chapter/1- Guidance. Accessed February 16, 2022.

Coding Section  

Codes Number Description
CPT 22513 Percutaneous vertebral augmentation, including cavity creation (fracture reduction and bone biopsy included when performed) using mechanical device (e.g., kyphoplasty), 1 vertebral body, unilateral or bilateral cannulation, inclusive of all imaging guidance; thoracic
  22514 lumbar
  22515 each additional thoracic or lumbar vertebral body (List separately in addition to code for primary procedure)
HCPCS C1062 Intravertebral body fracture augmentation with implant (e.g., metal, polymer)
  C7507 Percutaneous vertebral augmentations, first thoracic and any additional thoracic or lumbar vertebral bodies, including cavity creations (fracture reductions and bone biopsies included when performed) using mechanical device (e.g., kyphoplasty), unilateral or bilateral cannulations, inclusive of all imaging guidance (eff 1/1/2023)
  C7508 Percutaneous vertebral augmentations, first lumbar and any additional thoracic or lumbar vertebral bodies, including cavity creations (fracture reductions and bone biopsies included when performed) using mechanical device (e.g., kyphoplasty), unilateral or bilateral cannulations, inclusive of all imaging guidance (eff 1/1/2023)
ICD-10-CM C41.2 Malignant neoplasm of vertebral column
  C79.51-C75.52 Secondary malignant neoplasm of bone and bone marrow; code range
  C90.00-C90.02 Multiple myeloma; code range
  D18.09 Hemangioma of other sites
  D47.Z9 Other specified neoplasms of uncertain behavior of lymphoid, hematopoietic and related issues
  M48.50XA-M48.58XS Collapsed vertebra, not elsewhere classified; code range
  M80.08XA-M80.08XS Age related osteoporosis with current pathological fracture, vertebra(e)
  M84.48XA- M84.48XS Pathological fracture, other site
  M84.58XA-M84.58XS Pathological fracture in neoplastic disease, vertebrae
  M84.68XA-M84.68XS Pathological fracture in other disease, other site
ICD-10-PCS   ICD-10-PCS codes are only used for inpatient services. There is no specific ICD-10-PCS code for this procedure.
  0PU33JZ, 0PU34JZ Supplement cervical vertebra with synthetic substitute; code by approach
  0PU43JZ, 0PU44JZ Supplement thoracic vertebra with synthetic substitute, code by approach
  0QU03JZ, 0QU04JZ Supplement lumbar vertebra with synthetic substitute, code by approach
  0QU13JZ, 0QU14JZ Supplement sacrum with synthetic substitute, code by approach
Type of service Radiology  
Place of service Inpatient/Outpatient

Procedure and diagnosis codes on Medical Policy documents are included only as a general reference tool for each policy. They may not be all-inclusive. 

This medical policy was developed through consideration of peer-reviewed medical literature generally recognized by the relevant medical community, U.S. FDA approval status, nationally accepted standards of medical practice and accepted standards of medical practice in this community, Blue Cross Blue Shield Association technology assessment program (TEC) and other nonaffiliated technology evaluation centers, reference to federal regulations, other plan medical policies, and accredited national guidelines.

"Current Procedural Terminology © American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved" 

History From 2014 Forward     

05/03/2023 Annual review, no change to policy intent. Updating table one in the regulatory status and updating coding.

05/10/2022 

Annual review, no change to policy intent. Updating rationale and references. 

05/01/2021 

Annual review, no change to policy intent. Updating guidelines. 

10/29/2020 

Interim review, expanding policy verbiage for clarity and specificity between balloon kyphoplasty and mechanical vertebral augmentation. 

07/15/2020 

Corrected formatting in the policy section. No changes made 

05/05/2020 

Annual review, no change to policy intent. Updating rationale, references, background and regulatory status. 

05/01/2019 

Annual review, no change to policy intent. Updating guidelines to remove outdated coding. 

10/16/2018 

 Correcting history verbiage for 5/17/2018.  Annual Review updating background, description, regulatory status, rationale and references . Does not alter intent of policy.

05/17/2018 

Annual review, policy verbiage updated to align with the evidence summary. Does not alter intent of policy. Removing Kiva from policy verbiage. Does not alter intent of policy. Also updating background, description, regulatory status, rationale and references 

05/16/2017 

Annual review. Updating rationale, and references. adding regulatory status.

05/03/2017 

Annual review, no change to policy intent. 

05/03/2016 

Annual review, no change to policy intent. 

05/18/2015 

Annual review, no change to policy intent. Updating description, background, regulatory status, rationale and references. adding guidelines and coding. 

05/05/2014

Annual review. Added vertebral body stenting as investigational. Updated background, regulatory status, rationale & references. Added related policies.

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