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Got It, Hide thisIn people with radicular low back pain or spinal stenosis, epidural corticosteroid injections do not improve pain or function
Chou R, Hashimoto R, Friedly J, et al. Epidural Corticosteroid Injections for Radiculopathy and Spinal Stenosis: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. Ann Intern Med. 2015;163:373-81.
Review question
In people with radicular low back pain or spinal stenosis, do epidural corticosteroid injections improve pain and function?
Background
Radicular low back pain results from herniated discs or irritation of the nerves that supply the legs. The pain may be felt as lower back pain, sharp shooting pain in the legs, or burning. Symptoms may include numbness and difficulty using the affected limb(s).
Spinal stenosis results from compression in the spinal nerve roots of the lower back due to narrowing of the spinal canal. The pain may be felt as tingling, numbness, or weakness of the buttocks and legs.
Epidural corticosteroid injections are given by a needle inserted through the back into the space around the spinal cord in the affected area.
How the review was done
The researchers did a systematic review based on studies available up to May 2015.
They found 39 randomized controlled trials.
Key features of the trials were:
- people had radicular low back pain or spinal stenosis;
- treatment was epidural corticosteroid injections;
- treatment was compared with controls, which included placebo, epidural saline, injections without corticosteroids, or no injection; and
- outcomes were measured 1 week to 3 years after treatment.
What the researchers found
The quality of evidence varied. Findings that are based on moderate-strength evidence are reported here (low-strength evidence is not reported here).
People with radicular low back pain
Compared with control, epidural corticosteroid injections:
- improved pain immediately after treatment, but the difference was small;
- did not improve pain more than 1 year after treatment;
- did not improve function; and
- did not reduce long-term risk of surgery.
People with spinal stenosis
Epidural corticosteroid injections did not improve function more than control at 2 weeks to 3 months after treatment.
Conclusion
In people with radicular low back pain or spinal stenosis, epidural corticosteroid injections do not improve pain or function.
Effects of epidural corticosteroid injections in people with radicular low back pain or spinal stenosis*
| Condition | Outcomes | Assessment periods | Number of trials (people) | Effects of epidural corticosteroid injections compared with control† |
| Radicular low back pain | Pain | Immediate (5 days to 2 weeks after treatment) | 6 (701) | Small improvement that may not be important to patients: 7-points on a 100-point scale (but could be as few as 4 points or as many as 11 points) |
|
|
| More than 1 year after treatment | 7 (887) | No difference |
|
| Successful pain outcome | More than 1 year after treatment | 4 (504) | No difference |
|
| Function | 2 weeks to 3 months after treatment | 13 (1529) | No difference |
|
| Risk of surgery | More than 1 year after treatment | 14 (1208) | No difference |
|
| Successful composite outcome | 2 weeks to 3 months after treatment | 9 (604) | No difference |
| Spinal stenosis | Function | 2 weeks to 3 months after treatment | 5 (615) | No difference |
Related Topics
Glossary
A harmless, inactive, and simulated treatment.
Studies where people are assigned to one of the treatments purely by chance.
A comprehensive evaluation of the available research evidence on a particular topic.
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