Heyer Jessica H, Perim Dana A, Amdur Richard L, Pandarinath Rajeev
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, George Washington University Hospital, 2300 M Street NW, 5th Floor, Washington, DC, 20037, USA.
Department of Surgery, George Washington University Hospital, 2150 Pennsylvania Ave, NW, Suite 6B, Washington, DC, 20037, USA.
Eur J Orthop Surg Traumatol. 2020 Feb;30(2):329-336. doi: 10.1007/s00590-019-02577-2. Epub 2019 Oct 12.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate any association between preoperative smoking and perioperative and early postoperative complications in patients following shoulder and knee arthroscopic surgery.
This is a retrospective study using the prospectively collected National Surgery Quality Improvement Program database. All patients who underwent eight specific shoulder and knee arthroscopy procedures, identified by current procedural terminology codes, were included in this study and analyzed using univariate and multivariate analyses to determine the impact of preoperative smoking status on postoperative complications. These procedures were knee arthroscopy with meniscectomy (medial or lateral), knee arthroscopy with meniscectomy (medial and lateral), knee arthroscopy with chondroplasty, knee arthroscopy with anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction, shoulder arthroscopy with subacromial decompression, shoulder arthroscopy with debridement, subacromial arthroscopy with rotator cuff repair, and shoulder arthroscopy with distal clavicle excision. Thirty-day complications including cardiac, renal, wound, pulmonary, clotting, and mortality were assessed following knee and shoulder arthroscopy.
A total of 134,822 cases were included in the study. Multivariate analysis found that smoking was an independent risk factor for complications in shoulder arthroscopy with subacromial decompression (odd's ratio [OR] = 1.46; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.030-2.075), shoulder arthroscopy with debridement (OR = 1.933; 95% CI 1.211-3.084), and knee arthroscopy with medial and lateral meniscectomy (OR = 1.97; 95% CI 1.407-2.757). Smoking was not an independent risk factor for complications in the other five procedures studied.
Preoperative smoking was found to be an independent risk factor for complications for several arthroscopic procedures, though with variability between specific procedures.
本研究旨在评估肩部和膝部关节镜手术患者术前吸烟与围手术期及术后早期并发症之间的关联。
这是一项回顾性研究,使用前瞻性收集的国家外科质量改进计划数据库。所有接受了通过当前手术术语编码识别的八种特定肩部和膝部关节镜手术的患者均纳入本研究,并采用单因素和多因素分析来确定术前吸烟状态对术后并发症的影响。这些手术包括半月板切除术(内侧或外侧)的膝关节镜检查、半月板切除术(内侧和外侧)的膝关节镜检查、软骨成形术的膝关节镜检查、前交叉韧带重建的膝关节镜检查、肩峰下减压的肩关节镜检查、清创术的肩关节镜检查、肩袖修复的肩峰下关节镜检查以及锁骨远端切除术的肩关节镜检查。在膝关节和肩关节镜检查后评估包括心脏、肾脏、伤口、肺部、凝血和死亡率在内的30天并发症。
本研究共纳入134,822例病例。多因素分析发现,吸烟是肩峰下减压肩关节镜检查(比值比[OR]=1.46;95%置信区间[CI]1.030 - 2.075)、清创术肩关节镜检查(OR = 1.933;95%CI 1.211 - 3.084)以及内侧和外侧半月板切除术膝关节镜检查(OR = 1.97;95%CI 1.407 - 2.757)并发症的独立危险因素。吸烟不是所研究的其他五种手术并发症的独立危险因素。
术前吸烟被发现是几种关节镜手术并发症的独立危险因素,尽管在特定手术之间存在差异。