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Closed Loop Spinal Cord Stimulation

Aug 1, 2021, 15:00 PM by Corey W. Hunter, MD, Mount Sinai Hospital, and Jason Pope, MD, Evolve Restorative Center

 


Cite as: Hunter CW, Pope J. Closed loop spinal cord stimulation. ASRA News 2021;46. https://doi.org/10.52211/asra080121.052

 

Since it was first used in the 1960s, spinal cord stimulation (SCS) has consistently been compared to cardiac pacemakers (CP) because both therapies use artificially generated electricity to modulate human tissue that relies on electricity propagate signals. However, although CP technology advanced over time, SCS remained largely stagnant until recent years. For decades, CP platforms have read and interpreted the heart’s real-time electrical signals (electrocardiogram [ECG]), which dictate how and when the device will send an electrical impulse. The very idea of using CP without the ability to monitor ECG that could only guess when to send an electrical impulse not only seems illogical but dangerous, because an unstable rhythm can be life threatening; it was a vital feature. Pain, on the other hand, is not life threatening, so for SCS not to have the capability was never questioned . . . until now.

The spinal cord has a measurable electrical rhythm known as an evoked compound action potential ([ECAP], Figure 1). The waveform reflects the movements of sodium and potassium across the cell membrane and the propagation of multiple action potentials away from the point of stimulus. Despite SCS’s innovations in the past decade, it is still unable to read and interpret ECAPs to identify whether the stimuli are too strong or weak for an individual’s electrophysiology in given position at a given moment. In essence, the device will send the same electrical impulse, time after time, regardless of whether the patient is being overstimulated or understimulated (Figure 2).

 


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Figure 1: Evoked compound action potential (ECAP)


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Figure 2: Conventional, fixed-output, open-loop spinal cord stimulation (SCS)

The top figure represents the flux in stimulation of the cord (represented by ECAPs) based on positional changes. The bottom figure represents the static nature of conventional SCS systems such that regardless of over- or understimulation, the device will remain unchanged and continue to send the same level of stimulation, unless it is manually reprogrammed.


 

Closed Loop SCS

The concept is quite simple:

  1. A percutaneously placed cylindrical lead in the epidural space delivers an electrical impulse to the dorsal column of the spinal cord—the same as any other platform.
  2. Using contacts proximal and distal to the one that delivered the impulse, it creates the ECAP as it propagates in either direction, away from the point of stimulus.
  3. The pulse generator records and analyzes the ECAP and evaluates whether it is too high, too low, or “just right.”
  4. If the ECAP is not “just right,” the pulse generator will adjust the intensity of the very next impulse to correct for any overstimulation or understimulation.
  5. The next impulse is sent and the process repeats.

Advantages

A self-adjusting SCS system can internally preserve optimal programming parameters while adapting to the patient’s experiences or activities. For example, most patients want to minimize paresthesias, which are affected by their position or activity. Positions like lying supine and activities like coughing or sneezing increase stimulation to the point of discomfort (i.e., overstimulation). Because overstimulation has plagued SCS for decades, strategies like “paresthesia-free” stimulation or subperception programming have been used to minimize painful stimulation resulting from changes in position or activity.

Paresthesia is a common occurrence with conventional SCS systems because they are programed based on patients’ sitting and inactive position in the office. When patients go back to their more active daily life, inevitably they experience episodes of overstimulation as the leads come closer to the spinal cord at different intervals. Because the device emits the same amount of stimulation, regardless of how close or far it is from the cord, stimulation levels are in constant flux, forcing patients to turn their stimulation down. Although that effectively prevents overstimulation, it also limits the therapy’s efficacy because it is working below prescribed levels.

Closed-loop devices adjust themselves before the patient even perceives overstimulation. And once the patient’s posture changes, thus returning the lead back to its normal distance from the cord, it readjusts the again to keep the stimulation within prescribed parameters (Figures 3 and 4).

 


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Figure 3: Closed-loop stimulation

The top figure shows how ECAPs fluctuate much less based on position as compared to Figure 2. The bottom figure represents how the closed-loop system continually adjusts itself and changes its level of stimulation in response to the ECAPs, thus preventing episodes of over- or understimulation.


 

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Figure 4: Patient with conventional, open-loop stimulation on the left (a) and closed-loop on the right (b)

The top half represents the stimulation requirements to adjust for the patient’s position changes causing distance changes between the lead and spinal cord relative to the device’s actual stimulation. The bottom half represents the patient’s perception of the stimulation during the same position changes.


 

History of SCS Clinical Trials Leads to Double-Blinded Study

Two studies—one conducted in the United States (Evoke)1 and the other in Australia (Avalon)2—both demonstrated sustained clinical improvements in time spent in the therapeutic window and, subsequently, pain relief when using closed-loop versus conventional SCS (Figures 5–7).

 


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Figure 5: Evoke1 study comparison of patient perception, activation, and the therapeutic window for open- and closed-loop SCS at 3 and 12 months

 

 


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Figure 6: Evoke1 study comparison of the percentage of time patients spent in the therapeutic window at 3 and 12 months for open- and closed-loop SCS

 

 


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Figure 7: Avalon2 study comparison of patients’ time spent in the therapeutic window (TW) at 3, 6, and 12 months


 

Evoke was the first-ever double-blinded study on SCS. Other studies like ACCURATE,3 Sunburst,4 and Senza4 either compared SCS to different types of treatment or informed patients that the experimental systems would lack paresthesias, in both situations meaning that patients could identify whether they were receiving the study intervention. Because Evoke had no such biasing, the level of data is unprecedented.

All patients had the same system, placed in the same fashion, and programmed using ECAPs. Once everything was in place and programmed, the engineer turned on the closed-loop feature for the intervention group.

Evoke Study Demonstrates Closed-Loop Superiority

A prospective, multicenter, randomized, double-blind clinical trial involving 134 patients across 13 different sites, Evoke compared closed-loop stimulation (intervention) to traditional, open-loop fixed output stimulation (control). Both groups were programmed using ECAPs to create an individualized therapeutic window with a prescribed level of stimulation, and the closed-loop feature was switched on for the intervention arm only. Patients in the closed-loop arm reported statistically significant reductions in pain over the control arm at both 3 and 12 months (primary endpoints) (Figures 8–10).

 


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Figure 8: Percentage of patients with 50% of more pain relief (intend to treat population) at 3 and 12 months from Evoke1 study

 


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Figure 9: Reductions in visual analog score (VAS) at 3 and 12 months in Evoke1 study

 


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Figure 10: Visual analog score (VAS) outcomes at 3 and 12 months in Evoke1 study


 

The Evoke study also showed that the patients in the control group had better-than-expected outcomes because the traditional system was programmed using ECAPs as a guide. In fact, many of the measurements in the control arm were comparable to the experimental arm in the Senza study (Figure 11).

 


Summary of patient-reported outcomes at 3 and 12 months

Figure 11: Summary of patient-reported outcomes measured at 3 and 12 months in Evoke1 study


 

Conclusion

Occam’s razor is a principle of problem solving in which the simplest solution is usually the correct one. Perhaps all we needed all along to let SCS reach its full potential was the ability to make it adaptive the way cardiac pacemakers became so many decades ago.

Closed-looped stimulation provides neuromodulators, for the first time ever, with the ability to objectively measure and interact with the spinal cord’s electrical activity, just like a cardiac pacemaker would with the heart. The implications of this concept are the most progress science has made in the potential for providing superior pain control with SCS. It is not simply another SCS system touting improved outcomes; this innovation represents a major paradigm shift in our field—not just in the way pain is treated, but in the way it is measured.


Dr. Corey Hunter
 
Corey W. Hunter, MD, is the executive director of Ainsworth Institute of Pain Management and assistant clinical professor of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York, NY.
 
Dr. Jason Pope
 
Jason Pope, MD, is president and chief executive officer at Evolve Restorative Center in Santa Rosa, CA.

 


 

References

  1. Mekhail N, Levy R, Deer T, et al. Long-term safety and efficacy of closed-loop spinal cord stimulation to treat chronic back and leg pain (Evoke): a double-blind, randomised, controlled trial. Lancet Neurol 2020;19(2):123–34. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1474-4422(19)30414-4.
  2. Russo M, Cousins P, Brooker C, et al. Effective relief of pain and associated symptoms with closed-loop spinal cord stimulation system: preliminary results of the Avalon study. Neuromodulation 2018;21(1):38–47. https://doi.org/10.1111/ner.12684
  3. Deer TR, Levy RM, Kramer J, et al. Dorsal root ganglion stimulation yielded higher treatment success rate for complex regional pain syndrome and causalgia at 3 and 12 months: a randomized comparative trial. Pain 2017;158(4):669-81. https://doi.org/10.1097/j.pain.0000000000000814.
  4. Deer T, Slavin KV, Amirdelfan K, et al. Success using neuromodulation with BURST (SUNBURST) study: results from a prospective, randomized controlled trial using a novel burst waveform. Neuromodulation 2018 Jan;21(1):56-66. https://doi.org/10.1111/ner.12698.
  5. Kapural L, Yu C, Doust MW, et al. Novel 10-khz high-frequency therapy (hf10 therapy) is superior to traditional low-frequency spinal cord stimulation for the treatment of chronic back and leg pain: the SENZA-RCT randomized controlled trial. Anesthesiology 2015 Oct;123(4):851-60. https://doi.org/10.1097/ALN.0000000000000774

 

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