Gulati Sasha, Nordseth Trond, Nerland Ulf S, Gulati Michel, Weber Clemens, Giannadakis Charalampis, Nygaard Øystein P, Solberg Tore K, Solheim Ole, Jakola Asgeir S
Department of Neurosurgery, St. Olavs University Hospital, Trondheim, Norway,
Acta Neurochir (Wien). 2015 Jul;157(7):1157-64. doi: 10.1007/s00701-015-2437-1. Epub 2015 May 6.
There are limited scientific data on the impact of smoking on patient-reported outcomes following minimally invasive spine surgery. The aim of this multicenter observational study was to examine the relationship between daily smoking and patient-reported outcome at 1 year using the Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) after microdecompression for single- and two-level central lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS). Secondary outcomes were the length of hospital stays, perioperative and postoperative complications.
Data were collected through the Norwegian Registry for Spine Surgery (NORspine).
A total of 825 patients were included (619 nonsmokers and 206 smokers). For the whole patient population there was a significant difference between preoperative ODI and ODI at 1 year (17.3 points, 95% CI 15.93-18.67, p < 0.001). There was a significant difference in ODI change at 1 year between nonsmokers and smokers (4.2 points, 95% CI 0.98-7.34, p = 0.010). At 1 year 69.6% of nonsmokers had achieved a minimal clinically important difference (≥10 points ODI improvement) compared to 60.8% of smokers (p = 0.008). There was no difference between nonsmokers and smokers in the overall complication rate (11.6% vs. 9.2%, p = 0.34). There was no difference between nonsmokers and smokers in length of hospital stays for either single-level (2.3 vs. 2.2 days, p = 0.99) or two-level (3.1 vs. 2.3 days, p = 0.175) microdecompression. Smoking was identified as a negative predictor for ODI change in a multiple regression analysis (p = 0.001) CONCLUSIONS: Nonsmokers experienced a significantly larger improvement at 1 year following microdecompression for LSS compared to smokers. Smokers were less likely to achieve a minimal clinically important difference. However, it should be emphasized that considerable improvement also was found among smokers.
关于吸烟对微创脊柱手术后患者报告结局的影响,科学数据有限。这项多中心观察性研究的目的是,在对单节段和双节段中央腰椎管狭窄症(LSS)进行显微减压术后,使用奥斯威斯利功能障碍指数(ODI)来研究每日吸烟与1年时患者报告结局之间的关系。次要结局包括住院时间、围手术期和术后并发症。
通过挪威脊柱外科注册中心(NORspine)收集数据。
共纳入825例患者(619例非吸烟者和206例吸烟者)。对于整个患者群体,术前ODI与1年时的ODI之间存在显著差异(17.3分,95%可信区间15.93 - 18.67,p < 0.001)。非吸烟者和吸烟者在1年时的ODI变化存在显著差异(4.2分,95%可信区间0.98 - 7.34,p = 0.010)。1年时,69.6%的非吸烟者实现了最小临床重要差异(ODI改善≥10分),而吸烟者为60.8%(p = 0.008)。非吸烟者和吸烟者的总体并发症发生率无差异(11.6%对9.2%,p = 0.34)。在单节段显微减压(2.3天对2.2天,p = 0.99)或双节段显微减压(3.1天对2.3天,p = 0.175)的住院时间方面,非吸烟者和吸烟者之间无差异。在多元回归分析中,吸烟被确定为ODI变化的负预测因子(p = 0.001)。结论:与吸烟者相比,非吸烟者在LSS显微减压术后1年时的改善更为显著。吸烟者实现最小临床重要差异的可能性较小。然而,应该强调的是,吸烟者中也发现了相当大的改善。