The Norwegian degenerative spondylolisthesis and spinal stenosis (NORDSTEN) study: study overview, organization structure and study population
Indrekvam, Kari; Bånerud, Ingrid Fjeldheim; Hermansen, Erland; Austevoll, Ivar Magne; Rekeland, Frode Gurvin; Guddal, Maren Hjelle; Solberg, Tore; Brox, Jens Ivar; Hellum, Christian; Storheim, Kjersti
Peer reviewed, Journal article
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Date
2023Metadata
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Abstract
Purpose To provide an overview of the The Norwegian Degenerative spondylolisthesis and spinal stenosis (NORDSTEN)-
study and the organizational structure, and to evaluate the study population.
Methods The NORDSTEN is a multicentre study with 10 year follow-up, conducted at 18 public hospitals. NORDSTEN
includes three studies: (1) The randomized spinal stenosis trial comparing the impact of three different decompression
techniques; (2) the randomized degenerative spondylolisthesis trial investigating whether decompression surgery alone
is as good as decompression with instrumented fusion; (3) the observational cohort tracking the natural course of LSS in
patients without planned surgical treatment. A range of clinical and radiological data are collected at defined time points.
To administer, guide, monitor and assist the surgical units and the researchers involved, the NORDSTEN national project
organization was established.
Corresponding clinical data from the Norwegian Registry for Spine Surgery (NORspine) were used to assess if the rand-
omized NORDSTEN-population at baseline was representative for LSS patients treated in routine surgical practice.
Results A total of 988 LSS patients with or without spondylolistheses were included from 2014 to 2018. The clinical trials
did not find any difference in the efficacy of the surgical methods evaluated. The NORDSTEN patients were similar to those
being consecutively operated at the same hospitals and reported to the NORspine during the same time period.
Conclusion The NORDSTEN study provides opportunity to investigate clinical course of LSS with or without surgical
interventions. The NORDSTEN-study population were similar to LSS patients treated in routine surgical practice, support-
ing the external validity of previously published results.