intradiscal_ozone_treatment

Intradiscal Ozone Treatment

In a prospective real-world comparative study Sara Bisshopp et al. from Dr. Negrín University Hospital, Las Palmas published in the Journal of Clinical Medicine to compare clinical outcomes, hospital stay, and direct costs between initial intradiscal ozone treatment and standard microdiscectomy/discectomy in patients with lumbar disc herniation over a 24-month follow-up. Both groups experienced significant improvements in pain and disability scores. The ozone group had similar clinical outcomes to surgery but with significantly fewer surgical interventions (47% vs. 100%), shorter hospital stays, and reduced costs at 12 months 1).

This study taps into a timely and pragmatic clinical question: Can minimally invasive ozone therapy reduce the surgical burden and costs while maintaining efficacy for lumbar disc herniation? While the 24-month prospective design and real-world context strengthen external validity, several methodological shortcomings temper enthusiasm.

First, the non-randomized design introduces considerable selection bias. The criteria for choosing ozone therapy vs. surgery, though labeled as “offered,” are not rigorously controlled. This self-selection can strongly influence outcomes. Second, sample size is modest (n=70), particularly when divided into two groups (32 ozone, 38 surgery), limiting statistical power.

The lack of blinding, absence of a standardized rehabilitation protocol, and unreported imaging follow-up weaken clinical inference. Although pain and disability scores improved in both groups, the study fails to specify how many in the ozone group eventually needed surgery beyond the 24-month window — crucial for long-term utility claims. Moreover, costs are only directly hospital-related, excluding societal or indirect costs (e.g., work absence).

The statistical methods are valid, but the emphasis on p-values without effect sizes or confidence intervals dilutes interpretability. The claim of “similar outcomes” needs cautious handling—these are primarily subjective scores without radiological correlation.

Takeaway for Neurosurgeons: Ozone therapy may be a viable, low-cost bridge in selected patients with lumbar disc herniation, potentially delaying or avoiding surgery. However, the lack of randomization, small sample size, and short-term focus make this hypothesis-generating rather than practice-changing.

Bottom Line: Interesting real-world data supporting ozone therapy’s cost and hospitalization advantages, but insufficient evidence to displace surgery in standard care. Larger, randomized trials are essential.

Score: 5/10

Publication Date: 2025-06-26 **Corresponding Author Email: bernardino.clavo@saludcanaria.es

~~~ Blog Category: Spine Surgery, Minimally Invasive Techniques Tags: lumbar disc herniation, intradiscal ozone, microdiscectomy, cost-effectiveness, real-world evidence, pain outcomes, disability scores, hospital stay ~~~


1)
Bisshopp S, Linertová R, Caramés MA, Szolna A, Jorge IJ, Navarro M, Melchiorsen B, Rodríguez-Díaz B, González-Martín JM, Clavo B. Pain Relief, Disability, and Hospital Costs After Intradiscal Ozone Treatment or Microdiscectomy for Lumbar Disc Herniation: A 24-Month Real-World Prospective Study. J Clin Med. 2025 Jun 26;14(13):4534. doi: 10.3390/jcm14134534. PMID: 40648907.
  • intradiscal_ozone_treatment.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/07/13 18:30
  • by administrador