Lumbar Epidural Steroid Injections for Spinal Stenosis Multicenter Randomized, Controlled Trial (LESS Trial) (LESS)
Spinal Stenosis, Low Back Pain
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Spinal Stenosis focused on measuring Epidural Steroid Injection, Low Back Pain, Spinal Stenosis, Elderly
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Pain in the low back, buttock, and/or lower extremity (pain NRS>=5) with standing, walking and/or spinal extension (buttock/leg>back pain).
- Modified Roland-Morris score of at least 7.
- Mild-severe lumbar central canal spinal stenosis (Boden et al. criteria18) identified by MRI or CT scan.
- Lower extremity symptoms consistent with neurogenic claudication.
- Must be able to read English and complete the assessment instruments.
- Age 50 or older.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Cognitive impairment that renders the patient unable to give informed consent or provide accurate data.
Clinical co-morbidities that could interfere with the collection of data concerning pain and function.
Known dx of fibromyalgia, chronic widespread pain, amputees, parkinsons, head injury, dementia, stroke, other neurologic conditions Collect date about cervical spinal stenosis, painful peripheral neuropathy, EMGs
- Severe vascular, pulmonary or coronary artery disease that limits ambulation including recent myocardial infarction (within 6 months).
- Spinal instability requiring surgical fusion.
- Severe osteoporosis as defined by multiple compression fractures or a fracture at the same level as the stenosis.
- Metastatic cancer.
- Excessive alcohol consumption or evidence of non-prescribed or illegal drug use.
- Possible pregnancy or other reason that precludes the use of fluoroscopy.
- Concordant pain with internal rotation of the hip (or known hip joint pathology).
- Active local or systemic infection.
- Abnormal coagulation.
- Allergy to local anesthetic, steroid or contrast.
- Previous lumbar spine surgery.
- Epidural steroid injection within previous 6 months.
Sites / Locations
- Kaiser Permanente Northern California
- Kaiser Permanente Northern California
- University of Colorado
- Brigham and Women's Hospital
- Henry Ford Hospital
- Mayo Clinic
- Oregon Health and Science University
- Dallas VA Medical Center
- Virginia Spine Research Institute
- Harborview Medical Center, University of Washington
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Active Comparator
Epidural Steroid injection
Epidural local anesthetic injection
Epidural steroid injectate will be 2cc of .25 - 1% lidocaine followed by 1-3 cc of 40 mg/cc Kenalog (i.e. 40-120 mg Kenalog) or an equivalent steroid medication (depo-medrol 60-120 mg, betamethasone 6-12 mg or dexamethasone 8-10 mg) in an opaque syringe. Intervention: Epidural steroid with local anesthetic injection 2cc of .25 - 1% lidocaine and glucocorticoid (Kenalog 40-120 mg, depo-medrol 60-120 mg, betamethasone 6-12 mg or dexamethasone 8-10 mg)
Intervention: Epidural injectate will be 2cc of .25-1% lidocaine followed by 1-3cc of 1% lidocaine in an opaque syringe.