Exponent, Inc., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, USA.
J Neurosurg Spine. 2012 Oct;17(4):342-7. doi: 10.3171/2012.7.SPINE12203. Epub 2012 Aug 24.
This retrospective analysis of Medicare administrative data was performed to evaluate the risk of infection following instrumented lumbar fusion over a 10-year follow-up period in the Medicare population. Although infection can be a devastating complication, due to its rarity it is difficult to characterize infection risk except in large patient populations.
Using ICD-9-CM and CPT4 procedure codes, the Medicare 5% analytical research files for inpatient, outpatient, and physician carrier claims were checked to identify patients who were treated between 1997 and 2009 with lumbar spine fusion in which cages or posterior instrumentation were used. Patients younger than 65 years old were excluded. Patients were followed continuously by using the matching denominator file until they withdrew from Medicare or died. The authors identified 15,069 patients with primary fusion procedures and 605 with revision of instrumented lumbar fusion. Infections were identified by the related ICD-9 codes (998.59 or 996.67) after fusion. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis and Cox regression were performed to determine adjusted infection risk for each type of spine procedure (primary vs revision) and surgical approach (anterior, posterior, combined anteroposterior), accounting for patient (for example, age, sex, comorbidities/Charlson Comorbidity Index [CCI], and state buy-in) and hospital (census region) characteristics.
At 10 years, the overall infection incidence, including superficial and deep infections, was 8.5% in primary procedures and 12.2% in revisions. Among the factors considered, infection risk within 10 years was most influenced by comorbidities: for a CCI of 5 versus 0, the adjusted hazard ratio (AHR) was 2.48 (95% CI 1.93-3.19, p < 0.001); for ≥ 9 versus 2-3 fused vertebrae, the AHR was 2.39 (95% CI 1.20-4.76, p < 0.001); for revision versus primary fusion procedures, the AHR was 1.66 (95% CI 1.28-2.15, p < 0.001). Other significant predictors of 10-year infection risk included diagnosis of obesity (p < 0.001); state buy-in--a proxy for socioeconomic status (p = 0.02); age (p = 0.003); surgical approach (p = 0.03); census region (p = 0.02); and the year of the index procedure (p = 0.03).
Patient comorbidities were the greatest predictor of infection risk for the Medicare population. The high incidence of infection following instrumented fusion warrants increased focus on infection risk mitigation, especially for patients with comorbid conditions.
本项回顾性分析利用 Medicare 管理数据,旨在评估 Medicare 人群中在 10 年随访期间接受器械辅助腰椎融合术后感染的风险。尽管感染可能是一种破坏性的并发症,但由于其罕见性,除了在大量患者人群中,很难描述感染风险。
利用 ICD-9-CM 和 CPT4 手术编码,检查 Medicare 5%分析性研究文件中的住院、门诊和医师服务索赔记录,以确定在 1997 年至 2009 年间接受过腰椎融合术治疗的患者,术中使用了融合笼或后路内固定器。排除 65 岁以下的患者。通过使用匹配的分母文件,患者在退出 Medicare 或死亡之前可被连续随访。作者共确定了 15069 例初次融合手术和 605 例翻修的器械辅助腰椎融合术。术后感染通过相关的 ICD-9 编码(998.59 或 996.67)来识别。采用 Kaplan-Meier 生存分析和 Cox 回归来确定每种脊柱手术类型(初次手术与翻修手术)和手术入路(前路、后路、前后路联合)的调整后感染风险,同时考虑患者(如年龄、性别、合并症/Charlson 合并症指数 [CCI]、州医保参与)和医院(人口普查区域)特征。
10 年时,初次手术的总体感染发生率(包括浅表和深部感染)为 8.5%,翻修手术为 12.2%。在考虑的因素中,感染风险在 10 年内受合并症的影响最大:CCI 为 5 与 0 时,调整后的风险比(AHR)为 2.48(95% CI 1.93-3.19,p < 0.001);CCI≥9 与 2-3 个融合节段时,AHR 为 2.39(95% CI 1.20-4.76,p < 0.001);与初次手术相比,翻修手术的 AHR 为 1.66(95% CI 1.28-2.15,p < 0.001)。10 年感染风险的其他显著预测因素包括肥胖诊断(p < 0.001);州医保参与(代表社会经济地位的指标)(p = 0.02);年龄(p = 0.003);手术入路(p = 0.03);人口普查区域(p = 0.02);以及索引手术的年份(p = 0.03)。
患者合并症是 Medicare 人群中感染风险的最大预测因素。器械辅助融合术后感染的高发生率需要加强对感染风险的管理,特别是对有合并症的患者。