Minimally invasive tubular decompression versus traditional open surgery for lumbar spinal stenosis: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Publication Type Review
Authors Kartal A, Manalil N, Hamad M, Paracha S, Robayo A, Wang E, Hussain I, Härtl R
Journal Sci Rep
Volume 16
Issue 1
Pagination 176
Date Published 12/07/2025
ISSN 2045-2322
Keywords Spinal Stenosis, Decompression, Surgical, Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures, Lumbar Vertebrae, Laminectomy
Abstract Minimally invasive (MI) tubular decompression seeks to reduce soft‑tissue trauma compared with open laminectomy for lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS). We performed a PRISMA‑compliant systematic review and meta‑analysis of comparative studies (2015-April 2025) identified in PubMed, Embase, and CENTRAL. Adults with symptomatic degenerative LSS undergoing MI tubular decompression or open laminectomy were included. Evaluated outcomes included surgical parameters (e.g., overall complications; dural tears, surgical site infections, reoperation), perioperative and postoperative complications, patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs), and hospital length of stay (LOS). Heterogeneity was measured using I2. Random-effects models were primary; PROMs were also analyzed in a common-effect sensitivity analysis. Nine studies involving ten cohorts and a total of 2,860 patients were analyzed from 2,853 records. Random-effects models pooled odds ratios (OR) and mean differences (MD); PROMs were additionally examined with a common-effect model as a sensitivity analysis. MI tubular surgery was associated with fewer overall complications (OR 0.42, 95% CI 0.21-0.86), fewer surgical site infections (OR 0.28, 95% CI 0.11-0.69), lower EBL (MD - 46.65 mL, 95% CI - 80.89 to - 12.41), and shorter LOS (MD - 1.39 days, 95% CI - 1.99 to - 0.79). Reoperation, operative time, dural tears, and PROMs did not differ significantly. Overall, our results suggest that MI tubular-assisted decompression may offer advantages over open surgery for lumbar spinal stenosis. It was associated with lower perioperative morbidity and resource utilization - including lower overall complication rates, fewer surgical-site infections, reduced blood loss, and shorter hospital stays - while achieving similar patient-reported outcomes. Given between-study heterogeneity and the predominance of retrospective cohorts, these results should be interpreted with appropriate caution; nevertheless, when feasible and in appropriately selected patients and settings, tubular-assisted decompression may be considered a preferable option.
DOI 10.1038/s41598-025-28949-9
PubMed ID 41354742
PubMed Central ID PMC12764488
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