Rise of Big Data in Spine Surgery Research: A Bibliometric Analysis, 1993-2024.

Publication Title

Cureus

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

12-1-2025

Keywords

bibliometric analysis; big data; large database; research; spine; spine surgery.; washington; swedish; swedish neurosci

Abstract

Spine surgery represents a dynamic and innovative specialty with a steady increase in annual publications since 1900. The introduction of large databases and registries marked a paradigm shift in research. Despite their quantitative superiority, databases are inherently limited in a number of ways. Spine surgery remains a somewhat controversial specialty with significant cost, population health, and outcomes implications, and has, not surprisingly, become more frequently associated with large-scale registry studies. The objective of this study was to descriptively characterize trends in large-database usage in spine surgery research over time, including publication volume, topic distribution, and geographic output. A database search in the Clarivate Analytics Web of Science (WoS) database with keywords ("big data" OR "large database" OR "registry" OR "national database") AND "spine surgery" was conducted on July 7, 2025, and original and review articles published between 1993 and 2024 were included. Retrieved articles were categorized into seven areas based on primary research objectives, and data underwent descriptive quantitative analysis. Descriptive analyses were performed in Microsoft Excel (Microsoft® Corp., Redmond, WA, USA), and keyword co-occurrence network and overlay visualizations were generated using VOSviewer (Version 1.6.20, Centre for Science and Technology Studies, Leiden University, The Netherlands). A total of 633 articles were analyzed, revealing a more than 10-fold increase in publications from 2012 to 2024. The degenerative category was most common (189 articles), followed by public health (179) and infection (75). The United States dominated the research output (62.29%). Raw annual citation counts also significantly increased, from 146 in 2012 to 2,132 in 2024. The utilization of large databases in spine surgery research has substantially grown, reflecting a shift toward big data usage. Publications on spinal infections and public health outcomes have notably increased, while degenerative conditions consistently prevail. Geographic distribution remains skewed towards western countries, especially the United States. These trends suggest an expanding recognition of database studies as a critical tool for evidence-based research in spine surgery.

Area of Special Interest

Neurosciences (Brain & Spine)

Area of Special Interest

Orthopedics & Sports Medicine

Specialty/Research Institute

Neurosciences

Specialty/Research Institute

Orthopedics

Specialty/Research Institute

Surgery

DOI

10.7759/cureus.99856

Share

COinS