Yadla Sanjay, Malone Jennifer, Campbell Peter G, Nasser Rani, Maltenfort Mitchell G, Harrop James S, Sharan Ashwini D, Ratliff John K
Thomas Jefferson University, Department of Neurological Surgery, Philadelphia, PA 19107, USA.
J Spinal Disord Tech. 2011 Feb;24(1):50-4. doi: 10.1097/BSD.0b013e3181d0d0e8.
Prospective observational cohort study.
To determine the incidence of early postoperative complications in patients undergoing cervical spine surgery and its correlation with preoperative diagnosis.
The reported incidence of complications and adverse events in cervical spine surgery is highly variable. Inconsistent definitions and varying methodologies have made the interpretation of earlier reports difficult. No large study has analyzed the overall early morbidity of cervical spine surgery in a prospective fashion or attempted to correlate preoperative diagnosis and comorbidities with perioperative complications.
Data on 121 consecutive patients, who underwent cervical spine surgery at the Thomas Jefferson University Hospital from May to December 2008, was prospectively collected. Complication definition and gradations of complication severity were validated by a survey of spine surgeons and spine surgery patients. An independent assessor prospectively audited complication incidence in the patient cohort. Data on diagnosis, comorbidities, BMI, complications, and length of stay were prospectively collected and assessed using stepwise multivariate analysis.
The overall incidence of early complications was 47.1% with a 40.5% incidence of minor complications and an 18.2% incidence of major complications. Major complication incidence was greater in cases of infection (20.0%) and spinal oncologic procedures (30.0%), although this difference was not of statistical significance (P=0.07). Total number of complications recorded was greater in cases of infection and neoplasm (P=0.05).
Complications in cervical spine procedures occurred most frequently in cases involving trauma and spinal oncologic procedures. This study illustrates that the incidence of early complications in cervical spine procedures is greater than appreciated earlier. This difference likely arises owing to the use of a broad definition of perioperative complications, elimination of recall bias through use of a prospective assessment, and overall case complexity. Accurate assessment of the incidence of early complications in cervical spine surgery is important for patient counseling and in design of prospective quality improvement programs.
前瞻性观察队列研究。
确定接受颈椎手术患者术后早期并发症的发生率及其与术前诊断的相关性。
颈椎手术中报道的并发症和不良事件发生率差异很大。定义不一致和方法各异使得早期报告的解读变得困难。尚无大型研究以前瞻性方式分析颈椎手术的总体早期发病率,或试图将术前诊断和合并症与围手术期并发症相关联。
前瞻性收集了2008年5月至12月在托马斯·杰斐逊大学医院接受颈椎手术的121例连续患者的数据。通过对脊柱外科医生和脊柱手术患者的调查,验证了并发症定义和并发症严重程度分级。一名独立评估者前瞻性审核了患者队列中的并发症发生率。前瞻性收集并使用逐步多变量分析评估了有关诊断、合并症、体重指数、并发症和住院时间的数据。
早期并发症的总体发生率为47.1%,轻度并发症发生率为40.5%,重度并发症发生率为18.2%。感染(20.0%)和脊柱肿瘤手术(30.0%)病例的重度并发症发生率更高,尽管这种差异无统计学意义(P=0.07)。感染和肿瘤病例记录的并发症总数更多(P=0.05)。
颈椎手术并发症最常发生在创伤和脊柱肿瘤手术病例中。本研究表明,颈椎手术早期并发症的发生率高于早期认识。这种差异可能是由于围手术期并发症的宽泛定义、通过前瞻性评估消除回忆偏倚以及总体病例复杂性所致。准确评估颈椎手术早期并发症的发生率对于患者咨询和前瞻性质量改进计划的设计很重要。