A very common, very painful problem
A herniated lumbar disc (slipped disc in the lower back) occurs when the soft cushion between two spinal bones pushes out and presses on a nerve. It causes pain that can shoot down the leg, sometimes called sciatica. It affects millions of people and is one of the most common reasons for missed work and reduced quality of life.
Percutaneous endoscopic lumbar discectomy (PELD) — a minimally invasive surgery using a tiny camera and tools inserted through a small incision — has become a popular option. Recovery is faster than open surgery, and most patients do well. But the question of who comes back for a second surgery has never been fully answered.
What surgeons knew — and what they missed
Surgeons have long known that some patients were more likely to have problems after PELD. Age, weight, and smoking were suspected risk factors, but the evidence was scattered across dozens of small studies. No one had combined all that data into a single clear picture.
But here's the twist: when researchers pooled 39 studies and nearly 15,000 patients, certain risk factors emerged with surprising clarity — and the size of their effects was larger than many expected.
Why discs fail again
Think of a lumbar disc like a jelly donut. PELD removes the jelly that leaked out and is pressing on the nerve. But the outer shell of the donut — called the annulus fibrosus — is still there, and it may still have weak spots.
Certain conditions make that shell more fragile or the whole spine more vulnerable. Diabetes damages blood vessels and slows healing. Excess weight puts more mechanical load on the lower back. Smoking starves spinal tissue of oxygen. These factors do not just raise the risk slightly — the data show they can double it.
Inside the analysis
This systematic review and meta-analysis searched six major medical databases for studies published through August 2025. Two independent reviewers screened and assessed 39 case-control studies that collectively enrolled 14,454 patients who had undergone PELD. Researchers calculated pooled odds ratios — a way of quantifying how much each factor raised the odds of recurrence — for every potential risk factor they found.
The numbers behind recurrence
The overall recurrence rate across all studies was 11%, meaning about 1 in 9 patients developed a new disc herniation at the same level after surgery.
The factors that most dramatically raised that risk: a tear in the disc's outer wall during surgery (2.4 times higher risk), diabetes (2.3 times higher), smoking (2 times higher), greater spine flexibility in the forward-backward direction (2 times higher), and jumping back into high-intensity physical activity too soon after surgery (1.8 times higher). Higher BMI (body weight relative to height), older age, and a specific type of disc degeneration called type II Modic changes also increased risk measurably.
Knowing your personal risk profile before and after surgery may be the most important step in protecting your results long-term.
Why this changes the conversation
This analysis matters because it puts numbers behind what surgeons often suspected but could not prove. It also shifts some of the focus from the operating room to the patient's daily habits. Factors like smoking, diabetes control, weight, and post-surgical activity levels are all modifiable — meaning patients have real power to influence their outcomes.
If you are considering PELD or have recently had the procedure, talk with your surgeon about your personal risk factors. Ask specifically about returning to exercise, the role of blood sugar control if you have diabetes, and whether smoking cessation before surgery could meaningfully reduce your risk. This research will not change your surgical plan, but it can change how you and your doctor approach recovery.
This analysis combined studies from multiple countries, healthcare systems, and surgical techniques, which introduces variability. Most included studies were from China, which may limit generalizability to Western populations. Meta-analyses also depend on the quality of the original studies, and some risk factors were assessed in only a few of the 39 studies, making those estimates less reliable.
Researchers call for standardized follow-up protocols across PELD centers so recurrence data can be collected consistently. As the evidence base grows, the goal is a validated pre-surgical risk calculator — a tool that could give each patient a personalized estimate of recurrence risk before they step into the operating room, helping both surgeon and patient make better-informed decisions.