Keskimäki I, Seitsalo S, Osterman H, Rissanen P
National Research and Development Centre for Welfare and Health (STAKES), Health Services Research, Helsinki, Finland.
Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2000 Jun 15;25(12):1500-8. doi: 10.1097/00007632-200006150-00008.
A follow-up study using nationwide administrative databases.
To explore rates of reoperation after lumbar disc surgery and their regional and interspecialty variations.
In many Western countries, rates of lumbar disc surgery display significant geographic variations suggesting varying treatment criteria among operating surgeons. Few population-based studies have explored the risk of reoperation after disc surgery, and regional or interspecialty variations in the reoperations are unknown.
Patients who underwent lumbar spine surgery from January 1, 1987 through December 31, 1995, were identified in the Finnish Hospital Discharge Register. Data on the patients' initial disc operations, subsequent operations, and cause-of-death records were linked using personal identification codes. The Kaplan-Meier method and proportional hazard model were used to analyze risks of reoperation after initial surgery, according to hospital catchment area rates of disc surgery and for neurosurgical and orthopedic patients of university hospitals.
12.3% of 25,359 surgical patients with herniated lumbar discs underwent subsequent lumbar operations corresponding to the cumulative risk of 18.9% in the 9-year follow-up. Reoperation rates increased during the study period with the recent patient cohorts exhibiting risks. The reoperation risk showed a systematic geographic variation: the higher the regional disc surgery rate, the higher the reoperation risk. Overall, neurosurgical patients had a higher reoperation risk than orthopedic patients (relative risk [RR]: 1.57, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.17-2.10), but this was not a uniform finding.
The reoperation risk after disc surgery increased during the study period and was higher in hospital catchment areas with higher overall discectomy rates. The reoperation risks varied among the university hospitals but tended to be higher for neurosurgical rather than for orthopedic patients.
一项使用全国行政数据库的随访研究。
探讨腰椎间盘手术后再次手术的发生率及其区域和专科间差异。
在许多西方国家,腰椎间盘手术的发生率存在显著的地理差异,这表明手术医生的治疗标准存在差异。很少有基于人群的研究探讨椎间盘手术后再次手术的风险,且再次手术的区域或专科间差异尚不清楚。
在芬兰医院出院登记册中识别出1987年1月1日至1995年12月31日期间接受腰椎手术的患者。使用个人识别码将患者的初次椎间盘手术、后续手术及死亡原因记录的数据进行关联。采用Kaplan-Meier方法和比例风险模型,根据医院服务区域的椎间盘手术率以及大学医院神经外科和骨科患者的情况,分析初次手术后再次手术的风险。
25359例腰椎间盘突出症手术患者中有12.3%接受了后续腰椎手术,在9年随访中的累积风险为18.9%。在研究期间,再次手术率有所上升,近期的患者队列显示出风险。再次手术风险呈现出系统性的地理差异:区域椎间盘手术率越高,再次手术风险越高。总体而言,神经外科患者的再次手术风险高于骨科患者(相对风险[RR]:1.57,95%置信区间[CI]:1.17 - 2.10),但并非一致的结果。
在研究期间,椎间盘手术后的再次手术风险增加,在总体椎间盘切除术率较高的医院服务区域风险更高。大学医院之间的再次手术风险各不相同,但神经外科患者的风险往往高于骨科患者。