A new study from a Level I trauma center looked at whether navigation-assisted spinal instrumentation is better than traditional fluoroscopic guidance. Researchers reviewed records of 557 patients who had dorsal spinal procedures: 119 with navigation and 438 with fluoroscopy.
The study found that navigation helped surgeons place screws more efficiently after a learning curve, reducing time per screw from 27 to 19 minutes. Radiation exposure time was also significantly lower with navigation. Most importantly, screw misplacement-related revisions dropped from 5% in the fluoroscopy group to just 1% with navigation.
However, wound-related revisions were more common in the navigation group. The study did not report on overall adverse events or follow-up duration. Because this was a retrospective, single-center study without randomization, the results show associations, not cause and effect.
For patients, this suggests that navigation may improve screw accuracy and reduce radiation exposure, but the findings need confirmation in larger, more rigorous studies. The increased wound revision rate also warrants attention.