Background
Low back pain (LBP) causes more disability globally than any other health condition [
1]. In the United States (US), lumbar spinal fusion surgeries are commonly performed procedures for LBP and lumbar spinal disorders. National US data from the online Health Care Utilization Project, sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, show the annual number of fusion operations (all indications and spinal levels) has increased from about 61,000 in 1993 to over 450,000 in 2013 [
2,
3]. There was a 62.3% increase in the volume of elective lumbar fusion from 2004 to 2015 [
4]. Following spine surgical procedures, up to 61% of patients continue to experience chronic spinal pain, though the frequency of chronic postoperative pain after lumbar fusion is not known [
5‐
7].
Chiropractic treatments have been shown to be effective for LBP [
8‐
12]. The American College of Physicians clinical practice guidelines recommends components of chiropractic care, such as spinal manipulation and exercise, for the management of acute and chronic LBP [
13]. Chiropractic care is commonly utilized in the US, with approximately 190 million adult patient visits annually [
14,
15], and services are covered by most public and commercial insurers [
16]. As of 2004, chiropractic care has been included as a standard benefit in the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) healthcare system, with overall use growing approximately 18% per year since then [
17].
The reported point prevalence of postsurgical patients in US chiropractic clinics ranges from 2.3–12% [
18‐
20]. Several case reports describe clinical improvements with chiropractic care in patients with postsurgical lumbar spine pain [
21‐
27]. There are no cohort studies or experimental designs reporting on the outcomes of care provided by chiropractors in patients with prior lumbar fusion [
28]. A recent VA research agenda from a state-of-the-art research conference on non-pharmacological care of chronic musculoskeletal conditions identified postoperative spine pain as a research priority for manual therapies, including manipulation and massage [
29]. Though we are unaware of any data on the prevalence of postsurgical spine patients seen in VA chiropractic clinics, or the characteristics of care delivered.
A survey has been published describing typical clinical practices among physical therapists for patients with LBP and a prior history of lumbar spinal fusion [
30], but no such surveys exist which describe the typical postsurgical clinical practices of chiropractors. An evaluation of current chiropractic practice is required to understand the present use of chiropractic services in VA and inform future research. We conducted a survey among chiropractic providers working within VA to characterize 1) provider demographics, 2) VA referral patterns to on-site chiropractic clinics for postoperative fusion patients, and 3) to identify trends and characteristics of attitudes, beliefs, practices, and interventions utilized by VA Doctors of Chiropractic (DC).
Methods
Design, setting, and methods
This was a self-administered cross-sectional survey following best-practices frameworks established by Burns [
31], Drauglis [
32], and Kelly [
33]. Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) guidelines have been followed for reporting of this research [
34]. Ethical approval was provided through the VA Puget Sound Health Care System Institutional Review Board, MIRB#01560. Invitations with an information sheet and instructions on access to the survey (with hyperlink) were sent to the email addresses of all DCs working in a clinical setting in VA system.
Study data were collected and managed using REDCap electronic data capture tools hosted at VA Puget Sound Health Care System [
35,
36]. The survey tool was administered and stored in the VA Informatics and Computing Infrastructure (VINCI), behind a VA firewall, with all information collected stored on the secure VA network with access restricted to designated study staff.
Questionnaire development
Survey topics and questions were modeled on a recent cross-sectional study investigating United Kingdom physiotherapy practices related to lumbar spine fusion for non-Veterans [
30], with modifications made for relevancy to VA DCs and chiropractic clinical practice. Completion of the survey was voluntary, anonymous, and Internet Protocol addresses were not recorded. No incentives were offered to respondents. Eligible DCs were invited to participate and were provided a participant information sheet describing the study, and potential risks and benefits of participation. Participant submission of the survey served as implied consent. The survey instrument was comprised of a combination of one free-text question, twenty-nine multiple-choice questions and a matrix-table with twenty-two 5-point Likert scale items with options of
always, frequently, sometimes, rarely and never. Throughout the survey, respondents were given the opportunity to write-in free-text answers for further clarification or comment. The survey tool was piloted in a group of non-VA DCs (
n = 8) and was revised to improve clarity based on the feedback provided, prior to administration to VA DCs. Piloting DCs reported an approximate survey completion time of 10 min.
The first section of the survey tool collected provider demographic information including age, gender, employment status, VA and chiropractic experience in years, hospital training, diplomate training, supplementary academic or professional degrees, and academic appointments. The second section collected information on the referral sources for patients with prior fusion, reasons for referral, average prevalence per month of referrals received and patients treated. The last section of the survey collected information on management and practice patterns, approach to care, imaging preferences, utilization of patient-reported outcome measures, and interdisciplinary communication. Providers were asked to answer questions related to the timeframe following surgical intervention in which they would be comfortable performing high-velocity low-amplitude manipulation to the thoracic, pelvic, or lumbar regions, and their expectation for dosage of chiropractic sessions typically needed to reach maximum therapeutic benefit (MTB).
Participants and recruitment
In June–July 2018, all one-hundred thirty-four practicing chiropractic providers working within VA nationwide were contacted electronically and invited to participate through their VA e-mail. Reminders were sent at 3 weeks and 6 weeks after the initial invitation, if needed. Participants included practicing DCs employed by VA, chiropractic residents, “without compensation” academic affiliate DCs, and fee-basis consultant chiropractors working on VA campuses. Providers delivering care in the community which was purchased by VA were not surveyed. A list of all VA chiropractic site locations is available publicly online [
37]. The individual providers were contacted from a complete list of email addresses for all chiropractors in VA system, which was maintained by the VA Chiropractic Service Line.
Statistical analysis
All analyses were descriptive. We calculated frequencies and proportions for categorical variables, and means and standard deviations (SDs) for continuous variables. Analyses were conducted in Microsoft Excel 2016. All respondents that completed greater than 75% of the questions were included, and any missing answers were excluded from the analysis.
Discussion
Our study presents the first provider-level data on the management of patients with prior lumbar fusion by VA chiropractors. Veterans with a history of lumbar fusion commonly present in VA chiropractic clinics. The majority of respondents described treating patients with prior lumbar fusion within the past month. Survey responses suggest heterogeneity amongst VA chiropractors in the approach to the management of patients with a history of lumbar fusion. Although we are not aware of any published epidemiological data related to the prevalence of lumbar fusion presenting to VA chiropractic clinics, several case reports describe fusion patients seeking chiropractic care in the US [
21‐
25]. It may therefore not be surprising that a large percentage of VA DCs reported managing Veterans with prior lumbar fusion in the last month.
Referrals were primarily to address chronic pain and poor mobility, which was consistent with results of a prior VA DC provider survey describing general referrals [
38]. Most of the referrals in the current study were from primary care, physical medicine and rehabilitation, or neurological/orthopedic surgery departments. In the general US population chiropractors are direct access providers, however in the VA system all patients are referred by primary care or specialty service lines. The National Board of Chiropractic Examiners reports that 90.8% of chiropractors work in chiropractic offices, whereas 7.8% are employed in integrated health care facilities, such as VA [
39].
Imaging and patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) may play a role in clinical decision making. Most respondents in the current study require lumbar radiographs with or without flexion-extension views prior to initiating treatment for patients with prior lumbar fusion. Plain film radiographs are the most commonly utilized imaging after fusion due to ease of accessibility, low expense and relatively low-level of radiation exposure [
40]. Addition of flexion-extension views has the benefit of allowing for assessment of stability at the fusion site and integrity of related hardware [
41]. VA chiropractors frequently incorporated PROMs as is recommended by the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons [
42], North American Spine Society [
43] and Council of Chiropractic Guidelines and Practice Parameters (CCGPP) [
44]. PROMS can be useful for allowing providers to objectively measure outcomes for individual patients, and to analyze findings for groups of patients, without the subjectivity of general provider impressions.
Following lumbar fusion, most respondents were of the opinion that the typical dosage for a chiropractic trial to reach MTB was 12 sessions or less. This was in agreement with a chiropractic care pathway for Veterans with low back pain described in 2018 [
45], and a 2016 clinical practice guideline for chiropractic care of low back pain from the CCGPP [
44]. Neither the care pathway for Veterans nor clinical practice guideline are specific to patients with prior fusion. However, the treatment dosage reported by VA chiropractors for patients who present with added complexity of a prior surgical fusion appears to be similar to each of these guidelines for acute and chronic low back pain [
44,
45]. Randomized trials specific to the postsurgical population are needed to inform clinical guidelines specific to post-fusion chiropractic care.
In the current study, several providers indicated they make management and intervention determinations for patients with prior lumbar fusion on an individualized basis, and with additional caution. This appeared to be consistent with the large variety of therapeutic approaches reported by respondents and a paucity of treatments selected as
always applied. Despite chiropractic providers commonly being associated with thrust-type manipulative therapy, less than half of the providers reported
frequently or sometimes providing thrust-type manipulation to the region immediately surrounding the fusion (lumbar). The management strategies and intervention techniques commonly chosen as
always or
frequently included healthy lifestyle advice, pain education, exercise prescription, “non-thrust” manual therapies, and away from manipulative therapy, particularly with regard to the fused lumbar region. Distraction manipulation and mobilization were among the most commonly described manual treatments [
26]. This differed somewhat from a survey of chiropractic treatments by Clijsters et al. which identified the preferred treatments for lumbar conditions for patients without prior surgery as diversified (thrust) manipulation, followed by drop-table assisted and instrument-assisted manipulative techniques [
46]. Our study varied from results of a therapist-reported survey describing outpatient physical therapy after spinal fusions which focused on advice/reassurance (98%), instructing active patient treatments such as home exercise programs (91%), abdominal muscle exercises (83%), lumbosacral stabilization exercise (83%), back muscle endurance exercises (76%), and the passive treatments neurodynamic mobilizations (74%) and muscle stretches (67%) [
30].
To date there are no published systematic reviews that evaluate chiropractic or spinal manipulation after lumbar fusion [
28]. A systematic review of physical therapy and rehabilitation treatments identified good evidence to recommend patient education as a part of pre- and post-operative fusion rehabilitation, moderate evidence to recommend neutral spine control exercise to increase core strengthening as part of operative fusion rehabilitation, and moderate evidence for adding postoperative psychological coping techniques to a rehabilitation program [
47]. There is insufficient evidence to recommend joint mobilization, nerve mobilization, and soft-tissue mobilization.
This was only the second survey comprised solely of VA chiropractic providers that has been performed [
38]. Our provider response rate of 46.2% was slightly more than half the response rate (91.6%) of the former study published in 2009 [
38], but our questionnaire (n = 62) surveyed nearly twice as many providers as the 2009 study (n = 36). The VA has seen substantial growth in the number of employed chiropractic providers (21.3% annually) since the prior survey was performed and it is reasonable that this increase in providers has led to the reduced response rate [
17].
Our survey response rate was comparable with other self-administered surveys of physicians. In a meta-analysis of response rates of 45 web-based surveys the mean response rate was 39.6% [
48], and another study specifically exploring physician specialist response rates to web-based surveys had an overall survey response rate of 35.0%. Cunningham et al. described a wide variation in response rates by specialty, with neurology/neurosurgery (46.6%) being the highest and psychiatry (27.1%) being the lowest [
49]. Results from other studies which surveyed DC provider cohorts had similar responses to ours. A 2017 survey of chiropractic radiologist had a response rate of 38.4% [
50], and a 2018 study of chiropractic practitioners had a response rate of 43.2% [
51]. To our knowledge, this is the first study to survey any cohort of the chiropractic profession regarding the care of a patient with prior lumbar fusion, or any prior lumbar surgical procedure. Assessment of patient outcomes was beyond the scope of this project, however this should be explored in future work.
Our study appeared to be a good representation of VA chiropractic field in regards to age, gender, and years of experience. A cross-sectional analysis of VA administrative data in 2016 indicated that the typical VA chiropractor employee was a 45.9-years-old, male (81.4%) and had worked at VA for 4.5 years [
17]. This closely matched our respondents’ population mean age of 44.5 years, gender (80.6% male), and the majority were employed at VA less than 6 years (74.7%).
Limitations
There were several limitations to our survey. Although this was a national sample of all VA-employed chiropractors, the limited sample size may result in some findings being under- or over-represented. There may be selection bias due to the response rate (46.2%), as providers less likely to agree with study findings may have chosen not to respond. We did not attempt to account for differences in approach by geographic or respondent demographic factors. Several questions relied on self-report and not patient records, which could be subject to retrospective recall bias. Further, this study included the attitudes and beliefs of VA DCs related to the management of patients with prior lumbar fusion and may not be generalizable to the chiropractic profession in general. Likert categories utilized in the instrument matrix table were open to practitioner interpretation and may not have been interpreted in the same way by all respondents. Several treatment approaches were not provided as multiple-choice options and were written in by participants, and thus may have been underreported. Respondents specifically mentioned the use of drop table assisted techniques, passive modalities (e.g. electrical stimulation, therapeutic ultrasound, etc...), proprioceptive taping, and education/distribution of durable medical equipment (e.g. braces, self-traction devices, etc...). We did not include physical modalities, taping and/or equipment prescription in the survey instrument because, due to a paucity of definitive evidence, they are not recommended by CCGPP for routine low back pain [
44].
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to acknowledge Dr. Allison Rushton, Centre for Precision Rehabilitation for Spinal Pain, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom, for sharing the survey instrument utilized during a UK survey of physiotherapist published in 2014. Thank you to the following providers for piloting the survey instrument: Patrick Battaglia DC, Jess Brower DC, Amanda Brown DC, Dennis Enix DC, Vinicius Francio DC, MS, Jacob Funk DC, MS, Justin Goehl DC, David Leonard DC.
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