Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Department of Anesthesiology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2020 Sep 1;45(17):1215-1220. doi: 10.1097/BRS.0000000000003493.
Retrospective cohort study.
To evaluate the impact of incidental durotomy during spine surgery on the development of delirium in patients aged 65 and older.
Delirium after spine surgery has been shown to increase the risk of adverse events, including morbidity and readmissions. Durotomy has previously been postulated to influence the risk of delirium, but this has not been explored in patients 65 and older, the demographic at greatest risk of developing delirium.
We obtained clinical data on 766 patients, including 182 with incidental durotomy, from the Partners healthcare registry (2012-2019). Patients had their medical records abstracted and age, biologic sex, body mass index, smoking status, preoperative diagnosis, use of a fusion-based procedure, and number of comorbidities were recorded. Our primary outcome was the development of delirium. Our primary predictor was incidental durotomy. We used logistic regression techniques to adjust for sociodemographic and clinical confounders. We performed propensity score matching as a sensitivity test. We hypothesized that elderly patients would be at increased risk of delirium following durotomy.
Delirium was identified in 142 patients (19%). Among patients with an incidental durotomy, 26% were diagnosed with delirium. The incidence of delirium was 16% in the control group. Following adjusted analysis, the likelihood of delirium was significantly greater in patients with a durotomy (odds ratio [OR] 1.91; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.27, 2.88). After propensity score matching, durotomy remained significantly associated with delirium in multivariable adjusted analyses (OR 1.90; 95% CI 1.07, 3.39).
This investigation is among the first to specifically evaluate an association between durotomy and delirium in elderly patients undergoing spine surgery. The increased association between durotomy and delirium in this cohort should prompt increased surveillance and interventions designed to minimize the potential for cognitive deterioration or impairment during postoperative management of a durotomy.
回顾性队列研究。
评估脊柱手术中偶然发生的硬脊膜切开术对 65 岁及以上患者发生谵妄的影响。
脊柱手术后发生的谵妄已被证明会增加不良事件的风险,包括发病率和再入院率。硬脊膜切开术曾被推测会影响谵妄的风险,但这在 65 岁及以上的患者中尚未得到探讨,而这一年龄段是发生谵妄风险最高的人群。
我们从 Partners healthcare 登记处(2012-2019 年)获得了 766 名患者的临床数据,其中 182 名患者发生了偶然的硬脊膜切开术。患者的病历被摘录,记录了年龄、生物性别、体重指数、吸烟状况、术前诊断、使用融合手术、合并症数量等信息。我们的主要结局是发生谵妄。我们的主要预测因素是偶然的硬脊膜切开术。我们使用逻辑回归技术来调整社会人口统计学和临床混杂因素。我们进行倾向评分匹配作为敏感性测试。我们假设老年患者在硬脊膜切开术后发生谵妄的风险会增加。
142 名患者(19%)被诊断为谵妄。在偶然发生硬脊膜切开术的患者中,26%被诊断为谵妄。对照组的谵妄发生率为 16%。在调整分析后,硬脊膜切开术患者发生谵妄的可能性显著增加(优势比[OR]1.91;95%置信区间[CI]1.27,2.88)。在倾向评分匹配后,在多变量调整分析中,硬脊膜切开术仍然与谵妄显著相关(OR 1.90;95%CI 1.07,3.39)。
这项研究是首次专门评估脊柱手术中偶然发生的硬脊膜切开术与老年患者谵妄之间的关联。在该队列中,硬脊膜切开术与谵妄之间的关联增加,这应该促使加强监测和干预措施,以最大限度地减少术后硬脊膜切开术管理期间认知恶化或损伤的潜在风险。
3 级。