To date, the most common treatments for VCF are vertebroplasty and balloon kyphoplasty. These operations, which include reinforcement of the fractured vertebra with bone cement, provide ease of use, minimal invasiveness, high relief of pain in a short amount of time, and stability. However, despite all benefits, these operations have relatively high risk of serious adverse events for patients, of which many are associated to the use of cement.
Up to date, the obtained results are promising and show that VCFix has a performance at least comparable to gold standard treatments with greater stability upon application of physiological loading, but with no use of bone cement. In addition, the device is capable of angular expansion from endplate to endplate of the vertebral body, possibly preventing trabecular bone fracture and ensuring proper height restoration. To comply with the standard practice, VCFix can also be combined with instrumentation for posterior fixation if greater stability is deemed beneficial by the physician, generally providing the option of greater maintenance of the sagittal balance, greater vertebral height correction, and preventing secondary VCF. As a result, it is expected that serious complications are avoided, and that patients regain their initial functionality and experience none to minimum pain.
In summary, the development of VCFix is “in the best interest of patients” for the following reasons:
Faster and less complicated operation
The operation to implant the VCFix device is as follows: a pair of implants is inserted into the vertebra through a transpedicular approach in a minimally invasive surgery. The height of the implant is adjusted to allow intraoperative reduction of fracture and in situ correction of the vertebral height and the angle between the rostral and caudal bony plates of the vertebra. To date, VCFix is the only treatment for vertebral compression fractures that offers mechanical support to the fractured vertebral body and the spinal column without using PMMA bone cement. Since there is no cement injection step in the proposed procedure, the surgery takes less time and is likely to have fewer complications.