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Prospective Comparative Study of Stand-Alone versus Zero-Profile Anchored Cages in Single-Level ACDF: Radiological and Clinical Outcomes


Vol 11 | Issue 1 | January-June 2025 | page: 21-24 | Niharika Virkar, Chetan Pradhan, Atul Patil, Chetan Puram, Darshan Sonawane, Ashok Shyam, Parag Sancheti

https://doi.org/10.13107/jmt.2025.v11.i01.242


Author: Niharika Virkar [1], Chetan Pradhan [1], Atul Patil [1], Chetan Puram [1], Darshan Sonawane [1], Ashok Shyam [1], Parag Sancheti [1]

[1] Department of Orthopaedics, Sancheti Institute of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Pune, Maharashtra, India.

Address of Correspondence
Dr. Niharika Virkar
Department of Orthopaedics, Sancheti Institute of Orthopaedics and Rehab-ilitation, Pune, Maharashtra, India.
E-mail: niharikavirkar@yahoo.in


Abstract

Background: Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) is a well-established surgery for symptomatic cervical disc disease. Interbody devices—stand-alone PEEK cages and zero-profile anchored PEEK cages—restore disc height, decompress neural elements and promote fusion. This study compares clinical and radiological outcomes after single-level ACDF using these two implant types.
Methods: In a retro-prospective cohort from September 2019 to September 2021, sixty-two patients with single-level degenerative cervical pathology underwent ACDF with either a stand-alone PEEK cage (n=31) or an anchored zero-profile PEEK cage (n=31). Clinical assessments included VAS, Neck Disability Index and modified JOA scores. Radiographic evaluation recorded segmental and global lordosis, fused segment height, disc heights and subsidence (>2 mm). Follow-up was immediate, 3, 6, 12 and 24 months.
Results: Both groups experienced significant clinical improvement in pain and function at final follow-up, with comparable gains in VAS, NDI and mJOA. Radiographically, anchored cages showed lower subsidence rates and better maintenance of segmental height and lordosis. Dysphagia was mostly mild and transient.
Conclusion: Single-level ACDF produces reliable clinical improvement with both implant types. Anchored zero-profile cages may better preserve radiographic alignment and reduce subsidence without compromising early clinical outcomes and patient satisfaction postoperatively.
Keywords: ACDF, PEEK cage, Zero-profile, Subsidence, Dysphagia, Fusion


Introduction
Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) is an established operation for symptomatic degenerative cervical disease and compressive myelopathy, with early foundational descriptions that laid the groundwork for modern anterior approaches. Classic anterior techniques have demonstrated consistent decompression and symptom relief. [1][2] The anterior route permits direct disc removal and placement of structural graft or spacer to restore disc height, maintain foraminal dimensions and promote arthrodesis. [3][4] Historically, autologous iliac crest graft provided reliable fusion but carried donor-site morbidity that motivated the search for alternative materials and constructs. [5][6] Interbody cage technology progressed from early metallic cages to the more recently favoured PEEK spacers, chosen for radiolucency and a modulus closer to bone, which may reduce stress shielding and facilitate radiographic fusion assessment. [7][8]
Plated constructs showed early advantages in immediate stability and fusion rates in some series, but the anterior plate has also been implicated in higher rates of early postoperative dysphagia and anterior soft-tissue irritation. [9][10] This trade-off inspired low-profile and zero-profile anchored devices designed to provide fixation while reducing anterior profile and soft-tissue contact. [11][12] The literature contains mixed findings on whether the choice of implant significantly alters long-term clinical outcomes despite radiographic differences such as subsidence and segmental alignment. [13][14] Factors intrinsic to surgery — including endplate preservation, cage sizing and avoidance of over-distraction — remain central to reducing subsidence irrespective of implant design. [15][16] Given continued debate about the relative radiographic behaviour of stand-alone versus anchored constructs and the clinical significance of those differences, focused comparative studies are needed. [17-20]

Aims and objectives
1. To evaluate, quantify and compare radiographic parameters of single-level ACDF treated with a stand-alone PEEK cage versus an anchored (zero-profile) PEEK cage.
2. To assess and compare clinical outcomes and functional recovery (VAS, NDI, mJOA) between the two groups.
3. To determine the incidence of complications including subsidence, dysphagia and absence of radiographic fusion and to analyse their relationship with implant type and level of fusion.
4. To provide practical recommendations on implant selection and technique to minimise adverse radiographic events while optimizing patient-reported results.

Review of literature
Seminal clinical reports established ACDF as a reliable method for decompression and fusion in cervical degenerative disease, demonstrating early and sustained symptomatic improvement across varied patient cohorts. [1][2] Over decades researchers compared autograft, allograft and synthetic cages; while fusion rates tended to be comparable, each choice carried differing profiles for complications and radiographic visibility. [3][4] Titanium cages were introduced early but concerns about imaging artefact and stress shielding encouraged wider adoption of PEEK devices, both for radiographic assessment and for mechanical compatibility with bone. [5][6] Comparative series examining plated versus plate-less constructs found that anterior plating may better preserve immediate sagittal alignment in some circumstances but can increase anterior soft tissue contact and early dysphagia. [7][8]
Zero-profile anchored spacers were developed to couple fixation with a lower anterior profile, with multiple retrospective and prospective series reporting reduced early dysphagia compared with traditional plate-and-cage constructs while maintaining satisfactory fusion rates. [9][10] Subsidence remains variably reported across studies — a product of inconsistent definitions, surgical technique, implant geometry and patient bone quality. [11][12] Some authors conceptualise modest subsidence as benign settling that does not impair patient outcomes, whereas others report a threshold beyond which subsidence produces segmental kyphosis and potential clinical sequelae. [13][14] Meta-analyses and systematic reviews suggest implant choice influences radiographic parameters and perioperative morbidity but that patient-reported outcomes are often similar across contemporary devices when appropriate technique is used. [15][16] The literature therefore supports a nuanced approach: implant selection should be informed by the balance between radiographic preservation and soft-tissue morbidity, while meticulous surgical technique remains the most reproducible determinant of favourable outcomes. [17-20]

Materials and methods
Study design: Retro-prospective, non-randomised cohort study at a tertiary centre. Ethics approval and informed consent were obtained.
Study period and sample: September 2019 to September 2021. Sixty-two consecutive patients fulfilling inclusion criteria were enrolled. Inclusion criteria comprised symptomatic cervical radiculopathy refractory to 4–6 weeks of conservative management, progressive neurological deficit, Nurick grade ≥2, or single-level cervical myelopathy. Exclusion criteria included active spinal infection, inflammatory spondyloarthropathy, traumatic or pathological fractures, cervical spinal tumours, developmental canal stenosis, and ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament, prior cervical surgery, C7–T1 pathology and congenital block vertebrae. Patients were allocated to two groups: Group A (stand-alone PEEK cage) and Group B (anchored zero-profile PEEK cage), each containing thirty-one patients.
Clinical assessment: Baseline and follow-up evaluations included VAS for neck and arm pain, Neck Disability Index (NDI) and modified Japanese Orthopaedic Association (mJOA) score. Neurological examination and patient-reported outcomes were recorded preoperatively and at scheduled postoperative intervals.
Radiographic assessment: Standard AP, lateral and flexion–extension radiographs and preoperative MRI were used. Radiographic parameters measured included global cervical lordosis (C2–C7), segmental lordosis at the fused level, fused segment height, anterior and posterior disc heights, anterior cage distance and adjacent disc heights. Subsidence was defined as a decrease >2 mm in anterior or posterior disc height. Fusion was judged by bridging trabeculae, absence of motion on dynamic views and implant stability.
Surgical technique and follow-up: Standard anterior Smith-Robinson exposure was used. In the stand-alone group a PEEK cage packed with demineralised bone matrix was inserted; in the anchored group a zero-profile PEEK cage with integrated fixation screws was used. Patients were followed at immediate post-op, 3, 6, 12 and 24 months. Data collection included operative time, blood loss, perioperative complications including dysphagia (Bazaz score), and radiographic outcomes. Statistical analysis used appropriate comparative tests with p<0.05 considered significant.

Results
Sixty-two patients were included: forty-seven men and fifteen women, mean age 47.82 years. The most frequently treated level was C5–6 (43.5%). Each implant group contained thirty-one patients. Operative time predominantly ranged from 120 to 180 minutes; blood loss was generally minimal across the cohort. Both groups demonstrated significant improvement from baseline in VAS, mJOA and NDI scores at final follow-up with comparable magnitudes of change between groups. Immediate postoperative radiographs documented restored segmental height and increased segmental lordosis in most patients; over time there was a tendency for some reduction in segmental lordosis compared with the immediate postoperative measurements. Subsidence, defined as >2 mm decrease in anterior or posterior disc height, occurred in six patients overall (9.6% of cohort): two in the anchored group and four in the stand-alone group. Fusion as judged radiographically by bridging trabeculae and lack of motion on dynamic views was achieved in the majority of patients by 6–12 months. Dysphagia was reported in several patients but was predominantly mild and transient; severe persistent dysphagia was uncommon. There were no implant migrations or major neurological complications recorded in this series.

Discussion
This study demonstrates that single-level ACDF reliably improves pain, neurological status and function whether performed with a stand-alone PEEK cage or an anchored zero-profile PEEK cage. Both implant groups showed comparable and significant clinical improvement, which aligns with prior literature indicating that modern interbody constructs produce consistent symptomatic relief when appropriate decompression and alignment are achieved. [15] Radiographically, anchored cages in this cohort showed a lower incidence of subsidence and a better capacity to maintain segmental height and lordosis over time. [16] Although modest subsidence has been described as part of implant settling and may not always impair clinical outcomes, our observations and other reports caution that pronounced subsidence and consequent local kyphosis can adversely influence mechanical loading of adjacent segments and potentially affect long-term function. [17]
The lower subsidence observed with anchored devices may relate to immediate fixation through anchoring screws that distribute load and reduce micromotion, together with preservation of the subchondral endplate during insertion. [18] Technique remains critical: endplate preservation, avoidance of overdistraction and appropriate cage sizing are key modifiable factors to reduce subsidence risk. [19] Dysphagia rates were low and predominantly mild in both groups, supporting the premise that zero-profile low-profile fixation mitigates anterior soft-tissue irritation while not compromising stability. [20] It is important to note that differences in radiographic behaviour may not translate to early differences in patient-reported outcomes; longer follow-up will determine whether improved radiographic preservation confers sustained clinical benefits or reduces adjacent segment degeneration.
Limitations of this study include its non-randomised design, the modest sample size and follow-up limited to the early mid-term. Nevertheless, the findings support considering anchored zero-profile constructs when radiographic maintenance of segmental height and minimising subsidence are priorities, while recognising that both constructs deliver meaningful clinical improvement when surgery is performed thoughtfully.

Conclusion
Single-level anterior cervical discectomy and fusion reliably reduces pain and improves neurological function. Both stand-alone PEEK cages and anchored zero-profile PEEK cages produced significant and comparable improvements in VAS, NDI and mJOA scores. Radiographically, anchored cages displayed lower subsidence rates and better maintenance of fused segment height and segmental lordosis in this series. Clinical outcomes, however, were similar between implant types during the follow-up period reported. Surgical technique that preserves endplate integrity, avoids over distraction and ensures correct cage sizing is essential to minimise subsidence and maintain alignment. Anchored constructs may offer a radiographic advantage without negatively affecting early clinical recovery. Longer-term follow-up and larger, ideally randomized studies would clarify whether the radiographic benefits translate to sustained clinical advantage or reduced adjacent segment disease.


References

1. Aronson N, Filtzer DL, Bagan M. Anterior cervical fusion by the smith-robinson approach. J Neurosurg. 1968; 29(4):396-404. doi:10.3171/jns.1968.29.4.0397
2. S M, FP G, AA S, et al. National trends in anterior cervical fusion procedures. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2010; 35(15):1454-1459. doi:10.1097/BRS.0B013E3181BEF3CB
3. M P, J S, N G, et al. Anterior discectomy and fusion for the management of neck pain. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 1999; 24(21):2224-2228. doi:10.1097/00007632-199911010-00009
4. Eck JC, Humphreys SC, Hodges SD, Levi P. A comparison of outcomes of anterior cervical discectomy and fusion in patients with and without radicular symptoms. J Surg Orthop Adv. 2006; 15(1):24-26.
5. Chong E, Pelletier MH, Mobbs RJ, Walsh WR. The design evolution of interbody cages in anterior cervical discectomy and fusion: A systematic review Orthopedics and biomechanics. BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2015; 16(1):1-11. doi:10.1186/s12891-015-0546-x
6. Xiao SW, Liang Z De, Wei W, Ning JP. Zero-profile anchored cage reduces risk of postoperative dysphagia compared with cage with plate fixation after anterior cervical discectomy and fusion. Eur Spine J. 2017; 26(4):975-984. doi:10.1007/s00586-016-4914-5
7. A F-B, JK H, B O, et al. Swallowing and speech dysfunction in patients undergoing anterior cervical discectomy and fusion: a prospective, objective preoperative and postoperative assessment. J Spinal Disord Tech. 2002; 15(5):362-368. doi:10.1097/00024720-200210000-00004
8. H T, M N, ER L, et al. Dysphonia and dysphagia after anterior cervical decompression. J Neurosurg Spine. 2007; 7(2):124-130. doi:10.3171/SPI-07/08/124
9. M Q, H C, Y L, Y Z, L L, W Y. The use of a zero-profile device compared with an anterior plate and cage in the treatment of patients with symptomatic cervical spondylosis: A preliminary clinical investigation. Bone Joint J. 2013; 95-B (4):543-547. doi:10.1302/0301-620X.95B4.30992
10. Hofstetter CP, Kesavabhotla K, Boockvar JA. Zero-profile anchored spacer reduces rate of dysphagia compared with ACDF with anterior plating. J Spinal Disord Tech. 2015; 28(5):E284-E290. doi:10.1097/BSD.0b013e31828873ed
11. JS S, DG A, SD D, et al. Donor site morbidity after anterior iliac crest bone harvest for single-level anterior cervical discectomy and fusion. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2003; 28(2):134-139. doi:10.1097/00007632-200301150-00008
12. Wang ZD, Zhu RF, Yang HL, et al. Zero-profile implant (Zero-p) versus plate cage benezech implant (PCB) in the treatment of single-level cervical spondylotic myelopathy. BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2015; 16(1):1-7. doi:10.1186/s12891-015-0746-4
13. RB C. The anterior approach for removal of ruptured cervical disks. J Neurosurg. 1958; 15(6):602-617. doi:10.3171/JNS.1958.15.6.0602
14. SMITH GW, ROBINSON RA. The treatment of certain cervical-spine disorders by anterior removal of the intervertebral disc and interbody fusion. J Bone Joint Surg Am. 1958; 40-A (3):607-624.
15. Shedid D, Benzel EC. Cervical spondylosis anatomy: pathophysiology and biomechanics. Neurosurgery. 2007; 60(1 Suppl 1):S7-13. doi:10.1227/01.NEU.0000215430.86569.C4
16. Frost BA, Camarero-Espinosa S, Foster EJ. Materials for the Spine: Anatomy, Problems, and Solutions. Mater (Basel, Switzerland). 2019; 12(2). doi:10.3390/ma12020253
17. Fakhoury J, Dowling TJ. Cervical Degenerative Disc Disease. StatPearls. August 2021. Accessed November 3, 2021.
18. Connell MD, Wiesel SW. Natural history and pathogenesis of cervical disk disease. Orthop Clin North Am. 1992; 23(3):369-380.
19. Okada E, Matsumoto M, Ichihara D, et al. aging of the cervical spine in healthy volunteers: a 10-year longitudinal magnetic resonance imaging study. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2009; 34(7):706-712. doi:10.1097/BRS.0b013e31819c2003
20. Nordin M, Carragee EJ, Hogg-Johnson S, et al. Assessment of neck pain and its associated disorders: results of the Bone and Joint Decade 2000-2010 Task Force on Neck Pain and Its Associated Disorders. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2008; 33(4 Suppl):S101-22. doi:10.1097/BRS.0b013e3181644ae8


How to Cite this Article: Virkar N, Pradhan C, Patil A, Puram C, Sonawane D, Shyam A, Sancheti P. Prospective Comparative Study of Stand-Alone versus Zero-Profile Anchored Cages in Single-Level ACDF: Radiological and Clinical Outcomes. Journal of Medical Thesis. 2025 January-June; 11(1): 21-24.

Institute Where Research was Conducted: Department of Orthopaedics, Sancheti Institute of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Shivajinagar, Pune, Maharashtra, India.

University Affiliation: MUHS, Nashik, Maharashtra, India.
Year of Acceptance of Thesis: 2022


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Hypothesis of Improved Fusion Rates with Anchored PEEK Cages Compared to Standalone Constructs in ACDF


Vol 11 | Issue 1 | January-June 2025 | page: 13-16 | Niharika Virkar, Chetan Pradhan, Atul Patil, Chetan Puram, Darshan Sonawane, Ashok Shyam, Parag Sancheti

https://doi.org/10.13107/jmt.2025.v11.i01.238


Author: Niharika Virkar [1], Chetan Pradhan [1], Atul Patil [1], Chetan Puram [1], Darshan Sonawane [1], Ashok Shyam [1], Parag Sancheti [1]

[1] Department of Orthopaedics, Sancheti Institute of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Pune, Maharashtra, India.
Address of Correspondence
Dr. Niharika Virkar
Department of Orthopaedics, Sancheti Institute of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Pune, Maharashtra, India.
E-mail: niharikavirkar@yahoo.in


Abstract

Background: Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) is a trusted operation for patients with single-level cervical disc disease who continue to have pain, numbness, weakness, or signs of nerve compression despite treatment. The main purpose of this surgery is to remove the damaged disc, free the compressed nerve structures, and restore stability to the cervical spine. In recent years, surgeons have increasingly used low-profile cages to support the operated level after disc removal. Standalone cages are simple and less prominent, while anchored cages add extra fixation and are expected to hold the correction more securely. Both are commonly used, but their effect on disc height, cervical alignment, and subsidence remains an important concern.
Hypothesis: This study was based on the belief that both standalone and anchored cages would improve symptoms after ACDF, but the anchored cage would give better structural support. It was expected to reduce cage settling, preserve disc height, and maintain cervical lordosis more effectively than the standalone cage. At the same time, the two groups were expected to show similar clinical improvement, since pain relief after surgery mainly depends on proper decompression of the affected nerve or spinal cord.
Clinical Importance: The study is useful for surgical decision-making because the choice of implant can affect how well the reconstructed segment holds its shape over time. Both cages helped patients recover well and improved pain and function after surgery. However, the anchored cage showed better maintenance of alignment and less subsidence, which may make it a better choice when stronger support is needed. The low-profile design of both implants also helped keep swallowing problems low after surgery.
Future Research: Further studies with more patients, longer follow-up, and multiple centers are needed to confirm these findings. Future work should also look at fusion rates, bone quality, and outcomes at different cervical levels.
Keywords: Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion, Standalone cage, Anchored cage, Cervical disc disease, Subsidence, Cervical lordosis, Dysphagia, Clinical outcome.


Background
Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) has remained one of the most dependable procedures for treating cervical disc disease because it directly addresses the source of compression and instability in a single operation. The anterior cervical approach was first described in the classic works of Cloward and later Smith and Robinson, and these reports laid the foundation for modern anterior cervical fusion surgery [1, 2]. Since then, ACDF has continued to evolve, but its basic purpose has remained the same: remove the diseased disc, decompress the neural structures, and restore stability to the cervical spine [3].
The cervical spine is a highly mobile region, and degeneration in this area can produce neck pain, radiculopathy, sensory loss, weakness, or myelopathic symptoms. The degenerative process affects the disc, facets, and supporting soft tissues, and the resulting biomechanical changes may gradually reduce disc height, alter alignment, and narrow the neural foramina [4-7]. Because symptoms do not always match imaging perfectly, surgical treatment is usually reserved for patients with clear clinical correlation and failure of conservative care [6, 7, and 9].
Over time, the choice of fusion material and implant design has changed significantly. Iliac crest bone graft was used widely in the past, but it carried donor-site pain and added morbidity [10]. Cages later became popular because they avoided graft harvest and helped maintain disc space height [5, 11]. However, standalone cages can sometimes settle into the vertebral endplates, leading to subsidence and partial loss of correction [11, 13]. Anchored cages were developed to improve stability while keeping the implant low profile. The idea was simple: add fixation to reduce motion and better preserve cervical lordosis without the bulk of a traditional plate [8, 12, and 14].
This study was therefore important because it compared two commonly used strategies in single-level ACDF: a standalone cage and an anchored cage. The real question was whether the added fixation of the anchored cage would lead to better radiological maintenance without sacrificing clinical improvement [8, 12, and 14]. That question is relevant in day-to-day surgical practice, where the surgeon must balance simplicity, stability, dysphagia risk, and long-term alignment [8, 9, 12, and 14].

Hypothesis
The working hypothesis of this study was that both implants would improve pain and function after single-level ACDF, but the anchored cage would perform better in preserving radiological alignment and preventing subsidence. This expectation was based on the mechanical design of the two constructs. A standalone cage depends mainly on cage-endplate contact for stability, and that can be enough in many cases, but it may be less resistant to collapse when the endplates are weak or when the segment is highly mobile [11,13,17]. By contrast, an anchored cage adds internal fixation, which should improve initial stability and reduce the chance of settling over time [12, 14, and 18].
The study also assumed that symptom relief would be similar in both groups. In ACDF, most of the clinical benefit comes from removal of the compressive disc and relief of pressure on the nerve root or spinal cord [3, 6, and 9]. For that reason, both groups were expected to show improvement in pain scores, disability scores, and neurological function, even if the radiological profile differed slightly [6, 9, 18, and 19]. In other words, the implant might influence alignment more than symptoms in the short term.
Another part of the hypothesis was that dysphagia would remain low in both groups because both devices are low profile compared with plate-based constructs [8, 12, 14, 23, and 24]. Dysphagia is a known issue after anterior cervical surgery, but lower-profile implants are generally designed to reduce that risk [8, 14, and 23]. Since the surgery in this study was limited to one level, the expectation was that postoperative swallowing problems would be mild and not meaningfully different between groups.
The study also considered cervical lordosis. Lordosis is more than just a number on an X-ray; it reflects the shape and mechanical balance of the cervical spine [4, 7, and 19]. The anchored cage was expected to preserve segmental and overall alignment better because fixation should reduce micromotion and lower the risk of cage settling [11, 12, and 18]. This may matter especially at the lower cervical levels, where mechanical stress is usually greater [7, 13, and 19].
Overall, the hypothesis was practical and clinically grounded. It asked whether anchored cages truly provide a mechanical advantage over standalone cages in routine single-level ACDF, or whether both methods achieve similar results with only a small difference in radiological behavior [8,12,14,20].

Discussion
The findings of this study show that both standalone cages and anchored cages are effective for single-level ACDF, but the anchored cage appears to offer better radiological stability. Both groups improved clinically after surgery, which supports the well-established role of ACDF in relieving cervical radiculopathy and myelopathic symptoms [3, 6, 9, and 19]. Pain reduction and functional improvement were seen in both groups, showing that decompression remains the main reason for clinical success, regardless of the exact cage design [3, 6, and 9].
The more interesting difference was seen in subsidence and alignment. The anchored cage showed less subsidence, which is important because settling of the implant can reduce disc height, narrow the foramina, and gradually affect segmental lordosis [11, 13, 17, and 21]. This finding fits the known mechanical advantage of fixation. A standalone cage may work well, but when the implant is held only by endplate contact, there is always some risk of gradual sinking [11, 13, 21]. Anchored fixation appears to reduce that risk and help preserve the correction achieved during surgery [12, 14, and 18].
Lordosis was also better maintained in the anchored cage group. That is clinically meaningful because cervical alignment influences biomechanics and, over time, may affect adjacent levels and overall spinal balance [4, 7, 19, and 22]. The immediate postoperative gain in alignment is often easy to obtain, but holding that gain over months is more difficult. The study suggests that anchored cages may do a better job of maintaining the reconstructed cervical shape, especially in the lower cervical spine where mechanical load is greater [7, 13, and 19].
The dysphagia findings were reassuring. Both groups had low rates of swallowing difficulty, and there was no major difference between them. This is consistent with the idea that low-profile devices are less irritating to the esophagus and surrounding soft tissues than traditional plate constructs [8, 14, 23, and 24]. Dysphagia remains one of the most important postoperative complaints after anterior cervical surgery, so even a small reduction is meaningful in patient comfort and satisfaction [8, 23, and 24]. The relatively low dysphagia burden in this study supports the use of compact constructs when possible.
The results also show that implant choice should be individualized. A standalone cage is simpler and remains a good option in many patients, especially when the bone quality is adequate and the surgeon wants to avoid extra fixation. The anchored cage, however, offers more mechanical security and may be preferred when alignment preservation is a priority or when there is greater concern about subsidence [11, 12, 18, and 21]. In practical terms, the difference between the two methods is not in early symptom relief, but in how well the surgical correction is maintained over time [12, 18, and 20].
This study fits well with the broader evolution of anterior cervical fusion. ACDF has moved from iliac crest grafting to cage-based reconstruction and then toward low-profile systems that try to combine stability with less soft-tissue irritation [5, 10, 11, 14]. That evolution reflects an ongoing effort to improve both patient comfort and mechanical durability. The present findings support that direction and suggest that anchored cages may be a useful middle ground between stability and low implant prominence [12, 14, and 25].

Clinical Importance
For everyday surgical practice, this study suggests that both implants work well, but the anchored cage may be the better choice when preserving disc height and lordosis is especially important. At the same time, the low rate of dysphagia supports the use of low-profile anterior cervical implants in suitable patients.

Future Direction
Future studies should include a larger sample, longer follow-up, and multicenter data. It would also be useful to compare fusion quality, bone density, and outcomes at different cervical levels to better define which patients benefit most from anchored fixation.


References

1. Cloward RB. The anterior approach for removal of ruptured cervical disks. J Neurosurg. 1958;15(6):602-617.
2. Smith GW, Robinson RA. The treatment of certain cervical-spine disorders by anterior removal of the intervertebral disc and interbody fusion. J Bone Joint Surg Am. 1958;40-A(3):607-624.
3. Aronson N, Filtzer DL, Bagan M. Anterior cervical fusion by the Smith-Robinson approach. J Neurosurg. 1968;29(4):396-404.
4. Shedid D, Benzel EC. Cervical spondylosis anatomy: pathophysiology and biomechanics. Neurosurgery. 2007;60(1 Suppl 1):S7-S13.
5. Frost BA, Camarero-Espinosa S, Foster EJ. Materials for the spine: anatomy, problems, and solutions. Materials (Basel). 2019;12(2):253.
6. Fakhoury J, Dowling TJ. Cervical Degenerative Disc Disease. StatPearls. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2021.
7. Connell MD, Wiesel SW. Natural history and pathogenesis of cervical disk disease. Orthop Clin North Am. 1992;23(3):369-380.
8. Xiao SW, Liang ZD, Wei W, Ning JP. Zero-profile anchored cage reduces risk of postoperative dysphagia compared with cage and plate fixation after anterior cervical discectomy and fusion. Eur Spine J. 2017;26(4):975-984.
9. Caridi JM, Pumberger M, Hughes AP. Cervical radiculopathy: a review. HSS J. 2011;7(3):265-272.
10. Sasso RC, Smucker JD, Hacker RJ, Heller JG. Donor site morbidity after anterior iliac crest bone harvest for single-level anterior cervical discectomy and fusion. Spine. 2003;28(2):134-139.
11. Chong E, Pelletier MH, Mobbs RJ, Walsh WR. The design evolution of interbody cages in anterior cervical discectomy and fusion: a systematic review. BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2015;16:1-11.
12. Hofstetter CP, Kesavabhotla K, Boockvar JA. Zero-profile anchored spacer reduces rate of dysphagia compared with ACDF with anterior plating. J Spinal Disord Tech. 2015;28(5):E284-E290.
13. Cunningham BW, Kotani Y, McNulty P, Cappuccino A, Kanayama M, McAfee PC. Cage subsidence in the cervical spine after anterior cervical discectomy and fusion: a biomechanical analysis. Spine. 2000;25(19):2446-2451.
14. Wang ZD, Zhu RF, Yang HL, et al. Zero-profile implant versus plate-cage construct in the treatment of single-level cervical spondylotic myelopathy. BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2015;16:1-7.
15. Okada E, Matsumoto M, Ichihara D, et al. Aging of the cervical spine in healthy volunteers: a 10-year longitudinal magnetic resonance imaging study. Spine. 2009;34(7):706-712.
16. Nordin M, Carragee EJ, Hogg-Johnson S, et al. Assessment of neck pain and its associated disorders: results of the Bone and Joint Decade 2000-2010 Task Force on Neck Pain and Its Associated Disorders. Spine. 2008;33(4 Suppl):S101-S122.
17. Wu WJ, Jiang LS, Liang Y, et al. Long-term radiological and clinical outcomes of stand-alone titanium cage in degenerative cervical disc disease. Spine. 2012;37(16):1285-1293.
18. Vanek P, Bradac O, de Lacy P, Benes V. Clinical and radiological efficacy of anterior cervical microdiscectomy and fusion using a low-profile interbody spacer. Eur Spine J. 2013;22(1): Song KJ, Taghavi CE, Hsu MS, Lee KB, Kim GH, et al. Efficacy of anterior cervical discectomy and fusion with cage alone compared with cage and plate construct. Spine J. 2009;9(8):647-653.
19. Lied B, Roenning PA, Sundseth J, Helseth E. Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion with tricortical iliac crest graft or PEEK cage: a prospective outcome study. Acta Neurochir (Wien). 2010;152(12):
20. Gereck B, Ringel F, Reinke A, et al. Subsidence in anterior cervical discectomy and fusion with stand-alone titanium cage. Acta Neurochir (Wien). 2003;145(10
21. Lawrence BD, Zhou H, Brotman SG, et al. Risk of adjacent segment pathology after cervical fusion surgery: a systematic review. Spine. 2012;37(22 Suppl):.
22. Bazaz R, Lee MJ, Yoo JU. Incidence of dysphagia after anterior cervical spine surgery: a prospective study. Spine. 2002;27(22):2453-2458.
23. Fountas KN, Kapsalaki EZ, Nikolakakos LG, et al. Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion associated complications. Spine. 2007;32(21):2310-2317.
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How to Cite this Article: Virkar N, Pradhan C, Patil A, Puram C, Sonawane D, Shyam A, Sancheti P. Hypothesis of Improved Fusion Rates with Anchored PEEK Cages Compared to Standalone Constructs in ACDF. Journal of Medical Thesis. 2025 January-June; 11(1): 13-16.

Institute Where Research was Conducted: Department of Orthopaedics, Sancheti Institute of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Shivajinagar, Pune, Maharashtra, India.

University Affiliation: MUHS, Nashik, Maharashtra, India.
Year of Acceptance of Thesis: 2022


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