A systematic literature review of dorsal root ganglion neurostimulation for the treatment of pain

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Abstract

Objective. To conduct a systematic literature review of dorsal root ganglion (DRG) stimulation for pain. Design. Grade the evidence for DRG stimulation. Methods. An international, interdisciplinary work group conducted a literature search for DRG stimulation. Abstracts were reviewed to select studies for grading. General inclusion criteria were prospective trials (randomized controlled trials and observational studies) that were not part of a larger or previously reported group. Excluded studies were retrospective, too small, or existed only as abstracts. Studies were graded using the modified Interventional Pain Management Techniques-Quality Appraisal of Reliability and Risk of Bias Assessment, the Cochrane Collaborations Risk of Bias assessment, and the US Preventative Services Task Force level-of-evidence criteria. Results. DRG stimulation has Level II evidence (moderate) based upon one high-quality pivotal randomized controlled trial and two lower-quality studies. Conclusions. Moderate-level evidence supports DRG stimulation for treating chronic focal neuropathic pain and complex regional pain syndrome.

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APA

Deer, T. R., Hunter, C. W., Mehta, P., Sayed, D., Grider, J. S., Lamer, T. J., … Mekhail, N. (2020). A systematic literature review of dorsal root ganglion neurostimulation for the treatment of pain. Pain Medicine (United States). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/PM/PNAA005

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