Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Virginia Health System, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908, USA.
J Neurosurg Spine. 2011 Apr;14(4):470-4. doi: 10.3171/2010.12.SPINE10486. Epub 2011 Feb 4.
Patients with varied medical comorbidities often present with spinal pathology for which operative intervention is potentially indicated, but few studies have examined risk stratification in determining morbidity and mortality rates associated with the operative treatment of spinal disorders. This study provides an analysis of morbidity and mortality data associated with 22,857 cases reported in the multicenter, multisurgeon Scoliosis Research Society Morbidity and Mortality database stratified by American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) physical status classification, a commonly used system to describe preoperative physical status and to predict operative morbidity.
The Scoliosis Research Society Morbidity and Mortality database was queried for the year 2007, the year in which ASA data were collected. Inclusion criterion was a reported ASA grade. Cases were categorized by operation type and disease process. Details on the surgical approach and type of instrumentation were recorded. Major perioperative complications and deaths were evaluated. Two large subgroups--patients with adult degenerative lumbar disease and patients with major deformity--were also analyzed separately. Statistical analyses were performed with the chi-square test.
The population studied comprised 22,857 patients. Spinal disease included degenerative disease (9409 cases), scoliosis (6782 cases), spondylolisthesis (2144 cases), trauma (1314 cases), kyphosis (831 cases), and other (2377 cases). The overall complication rate was 8.4%. Complication rates for ASA Grades 1 through 5 were 5.4%, 9.0%, 14.4%, 20.3%, and 50.0%, respectively (p = 0.001). In patients undergoing surgery for degenerative lumbar diseases and major adult deformity, similarly increasing rates of morbidity were found in higher-grade patients. The mortality rate was also higher in higher-grade patients. The incidence of major complications, including wound infections, hematomas, respiratory problems, and thromboembolic events, was also greater in patients with higher ASA grades.
Patients with higher ASA grades undergoing spinal surgery had significantly higher rates of morbidity than those with lower ASA grades. Given the common application of the ASA system to surgical patients, this grade may prove helpful for surgical decision making and preoperative counseling with regard to risks of morbidity and mortality.
患有多种合并症的患者常出现脊柱病变,可能需要手术干预,但很少有研究探讨风险分层以确定与脊柱疾病手术治疗相关的发病率和死亡率。本研究分析了多中心多外科医生脊柱研究学会发病率和死亡率数据库中 22857 例患者的发病率和死亡率数据,这些患者按美国麻醉医师协会(ASA)身体状况分类进行分层,这是一种常用的描述术前身体状况和预测手术发病率的系统。
在 2007 年(收集 ASA 数据的那一年),对脊柱研究学会发病率和死亡率数据库进行了查询。纳入标准为报告的 ASA 分级。病例按手术类型和疾病过程进行分类。记录了手术入路和器械类型的详细信息。评估了主要围手术期并发症和死亡。还分别对两个大的亚组(成人退行性腰椎疾病患者和严重畸形患者)进行了单独分析。采用卡方检验进行统计学分析。
研究人群包括 22857 例患者。脊柱疾病包括退行性疾病(9409 例)、脊柱侧凸(6782 例)、脊椎滑脱(2144 例)、创伤(1314 例)、后凸畸形(831 例)和其他(2377 例)。总体并发症发生率为 8.4%。ASA 分级 1 至 5 的并发症发生率分别为 5.4%、9.0%、14.4%、20.3%和 50.0%(p=0.001)。在接受退行性腰椎疾病和成人严重畸形手术的患者中,发现高等级患者的发病率也呈类似增加趋势。高等级患者的死亡率也更高。高 ASA 分级患者的主要并发症发生率(包括伤口感染、血肿、呼吸问题和血栓栓塞事件)也更高。
接受脊柱手术的 ASA 分级较高的患者的发病率明显高于 ASA 分级较低的患者。鉴于 ASA 系统在外科患者中的普遍应用,该分级可能有助于手术决策和围手术期咨询,以了解发病率和死亡率的风险。