Department of Neurosurgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
J Neurosurg Spine. 2014 Jan;20(1):45-52. doi: 10.3171/2013.10.SPINE1364. Epub 2013 Nov 8.
Posterior lumbar spinal fusion for degenerative spine disease is a common procedure, and its use is increasing annually. The rate of infection, as well as the factors associated with an increased risk of infection, remains unclear for this patient population. A better understanding of these features may help guide treatment strategies aimed at minimizing infection for this relatively common procedure. The authors' goals were therefore to ascertain the incidence of postoperative spinal infections and identify factors associated with postoperative spinal infections.
Data obtained in adult patients who underwent instrumented posterior lumbar fusion for degenerative spine disease between 1993 and 2010 were retrospectively reviewed. Stepwise multivariate proportional hazards regression analysis was used to identify factors associated with infection. Variables with p < 0.05 were considered statistically significant.
During the study period, 817 consecutive patients underwent lumbar fusion for degenerative spine disease, and 37 patients (4.5%) developed postoperative spine infection at a median of 0.6 months (IQR 0.3-0.9). The factors independently associated with an increased risk of infection were increasing age (RR 1.004 [95% CI 1.001-1.009], p = 0.049), diabetes (RR 5.583 [95% CI 1.322-19.737], p = 0.02), obesity (RR 6.216 [95% CI 1.832-9.338], p = 0.005), previous spine surgery (RR 2.994 [95% CI 1.263-9.346], p = 0.009), and increasing duration of hospital stay (RR 1.155 [95% CI 1.076-1.230], p = 0.003). Of the 37 patients in whom infection developed, 21 (57%) required operative intervention but only 3 (8%) required instrumentation removal as part of their infection management.
This study identifies that several factors--older age, diabetes, obesity, prior spine surgery, and length of hospital stay--were each independently associated with an increased risk of developing infection among patients undergoing instrumented lumbar fusion for degenerative spine disease. The overwhelming majority of these patients were treated effectively without hardware removal.
退行性脊柱疾病后路腰椎融合术是一种常见的手术,其应用逐年增加。对于该患者人群,感染率以及与感染风险增加相关的因素仍不清楚。更好地了解这些特征可能有助于指导旨在最小化这种相对常见手术感染风险的治疗策略。因此,作者的目的是确定术后脊柱感染的发生率并确定与术后脊柱感染相关的因素。
回顾性分析了 1993 年至 2010 年间接受器械辅助后路腰椎融合术治疗退行性脊柱疾病的成年患者的数据。采用逐步多元比例风险回归分析确定与感染相关的因素。具有 p<0.05 的变量被认为具有统计学意义。
在研究期间,817 例连续退行性脊柱疾病患者接受了腰椎融合术,37 例(4.5%)患者在中位数 0.6 个月(IQR 0.3-0.9)时发生术后脊柱感染。与感染风险增加相关的独立因素是年龄增加(RR 1.004 [95%CI 1.001-1.009],p=0.049)、糖尿病(RR 5.583 [95%CI 1.322-19.737],p=0.02)、肥胖症(RR 6.216 [95%CI 1.832-9.338],p=0.005)、既往脊柱手术史(RR 2.994 [95%CI 1.263-9.346],p=0.009)和住院时间延长(RR 1.155 [95%CI 1.076-1.230],p=0.003)。在发生感染的 37 例患者中,21 例(57%)需要手术干预,但只有 3 例(8%)需要器械去除作为感染管理的一部分。
本研究表明,几种因素(年龄较大、糖尿病、肥胖症、既往脊柱手术史和住院时间)均与退行性脊柱疾病后路腰椎融合术患者感染风险增加独立相关。这些患者中的绝大多数无需去除硬件即可有效治疗。