Shavelle Robert M, Paculdo David R, Tran Linh M, Strauss David J, Brooks Jordan C, DeVivo Michael J
From the Life Expectancy Project, San Francisco, California (RMS, DRP, LMT, DJS, JCB); and Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, University of Alabama at Birmingham (MJD).
Am J Phys Med Rehabil. 2015 Mar;94(3):180-91. doi: 10.1097/PHM.0000000000000140.
Previous research on the life expectancy of persons with American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) Impairment Scale Grade D spinal cord injury has considered them as a large homogenous group, making no functional or medical distinctions. This study sought to (1) determine how survival in this group depends on ambulatory function and the extent of bowel or bladder dysfunction, (2) compute life expectancies for various subgroups, and (3) examine whether survival has improved over time.
Data were from 8,206 adults with ASIA Impairment Scale Grade D spinal cord injury in the Spinal Cord Injury Model Systems database who were not ventilator dependent and who survived more than 1 yr after injury. There were a total of 114,739 person-years of follow-up and 1,730 deaths during the 1970-2011 study period. Empirical age- and sex-specific mortality rates were computed. Regression analysis of survival data with time-dependent covariates was used to determine the effect of risk factors, to test for a time trend, and to estimate mortality rates for subgroups. Life expectancies were obtained from life tables constructed for each subgroup.
The ability to walk, whether independently or with an assistive device, was associated with longer survival than wheelchair dependence. The need for an indwelling catheter, and to a lesser extent intermittent catheterization, was associated with increased mortality risk. Persons who walked unaided and who did not require catheterization had life expectancies roughly 90% of normal. Those who required a wheelchair for locomotion had life expectancies comparable with that in paraplegia, less than 75% of normal. No time trend in survival was found.
Life expectancy of persons with ASIA Impairment Scale D spinal cord injury depends strongly on the ability to walk and the need for catheterization.
先前关于美国脊髓损伤协会(ASIA)损伤分级D级脊髓损伤患者预期寿命的研究将他们视为一个同质化的大群体,未进行功能或医学区分。本研究旨在:(1)确定该群体的生存率如何取决于行走功能以及肠道或膀胱功能障碍的程度;(2)计算各亚组的预期寿命;(3)研究生存率是否随时间有所改善。
数据来自脊髓损伤模型系统数据库中8206例ASIA损伤分级D级脊髓损伤的成年人,这些患者不依赖呼吸机且伤后存活超过1年。在1970 - 2011年研究期间,共有114739人年的随访时间,1730例死亡。计算了按年龄和性别划分的实际死亡率。使用生存数据与时间相依协变量的回归分析来确定危险因素的影响、检验时间趋势并估计亚组的死亡率。预期寿命从为每个亚组构建的生命表中获得。
能够行走,无论是独立行走还是借助辅助装置行走,与比依赖轮椅更长的生存期相关。需要留置导尿管以及在较小程度上需要间歇性导尿与死亡风险增加相关。独立行走且不需要导尿的人的预期寿命约为正常预期寿命的90%。那些需要轮椅行动的人的预期寿命与截瘫患者相当,不到正常预期寿命的75%。未发现生存率的时间趋势。
ASIA损伤分级D级脊髓损伤患者的预期寿命在很大程度上取决于行走能力和导尿需求。