Prospective, multicenter clinical trial comparing the M6-C compressible cervical disc with anterior cervical discectomy and fusion for the treatment of single-level degenerative cervical radiculopathy: 5-year results of an FDA investigational device exemption study

Spine J. 2024 Feb;24(2):219-230. doi: 10.1016/j.spinee.2023.10.020. Epub 2023 Nov 10.

Abstract

Background context: Various total disc replacement (TDR) designs have been compared to anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) with favorable short and long-term outcomes in FDA-approved investigational device exemption (IDE) trials. The unique design of M6-C, with a compressible viscoelastic nuclear core and an annular structure, has previously demonstrated favorable clinical outcomes through 24 months.

Purpose: To evaluate the long-term safety and effectiveness of the M6-C compressible artificial cervical disc and compare to ACDF at 5 years.

Study design: Prospective, multicenter, concurrently and historically controlled, FDA-approved IDE clinical trial.

Patient sample: Subjects with one-level symptomatic degenerative cervical radiculopathy were enrolled and received M6-C (n=160) or ACDF (n=189) treatment as part of the IDE study. Safety outcomes were evaluated at 5 years for all subjects. The primary effectiveness endpoint was available at 5 years for 113 M6-C subjects and 106 ACDF controls.

Outcome measures: The primary endpoint of this analysis was composite clinical success (CCS) at 60 months. Secondary endpoints were function and pain (neck disability index, VAS), physical quality of life (SF-36, SF-12), safety, neurologic, and radiographic assessments.

Methods: Propensity score subclassification was used to control for selection bias and match baseline covariates of the control group to the M6-C subjects. Sixty-month CCS rates were estimated for each treatment group using a generalized linear model controlling for propensity score.

Results: At 5 years postoperatively, the M6-C treatment resulted in 82.3% CCS while the ACDF group showed 67.0% CCS (superiority p=.013). Secondary endpoints indicated that significantly more M6-C subjects achieved VAS neck and arm pain improvements and showed maintained or improved physical functioning on quality-of-life measures compared to baseline assessments. The M6-C group-maintained flexion-extension motion, with significantly greater increases from baseline disc height and disc angle than observed in the control group. The rates of M6-C subsequent surgical interventions (SSI; 3.1%) and definitely device- or procedure-related serious adverse events (SAE failure; 3.1%) were similar to ACDF rates (SSI=5.3%, SAE failure=4.8%; p>.05 for both).

Conclusions: Subjects treated with the M6-C artificial disc demonstrated superior 5-year achievement of clinical success when compared to ACDF controls. In addition, significantly more subjects in the M6-C group showed improved pain and physical functioning scores than observed in ACDF subjects, with no difference in reoperation rates or safety outcomes.

Keywords: Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion; Arthroplasty; Cervical radiculopathy; Cervical total disc replacement; Long-term; M6-C artificial cervical disc; Motion preservation; Patient-reported outcomes.

Publication types

  • Clinical Trial
  • Multicenter Study

MeSH terms

  • Cervical Vertebrae / surgery
  • Diskectomy / adverse effects
  • Diskectomy / methods
  • Follow-Up Studies
  • Humans
  • Intervertebral Disc Degeneration* / surgery
  • Neck Pain / surgery
  • Prospective Studies
  • Quality of Life
  • Radiculopathy* / surgery
  • Spinal Fusion* / methods
  • Total Disc Replacement* / adverse effects
  • Total Disc Replacement* / methods
  • Treatment Outcome