Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Washington University, St. Louis, MO.
Alpert School of Medicine, Brown University, Providence, RI.
Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2021 Apr 1;46(7):457-463. doi: 10.1097/BRS.0000000000003812.
Retrospective case-control study.
The aim of this study was to determine the influence of obesity on risk factors for adverse outcome after lumbar spine fusion (LSF).
Obesity is risk factor for complications after LSF and poses unique challenges regarding optimization of care. Nonetheless, this patient population is not well-studied.
Adult patients undergoing LSF were identified the State Inpatient Database. Patients were identified as obese or nonobese using ICD-9 codes. Outcome variables were 90-day readmission, major medical complication, infection, and revision rates. Data were queried for demographics, comorbidities, surgery characteristics, and outcome variables. Logistic multivariate regression was utilized, serially testing interactions between obesity and other independent variables in separate models for each outcome. The Benjamini-Hochberg procedure was used to adjust statistical significance for multiple comparisons.
A total of 262,153 patients were included: 31,062 obese and 231, 091 nonobese. For major complications, obese patients had lower odds ratios (ORs) versus nonobese patients for cerebrovascular accident, diabetes with chronic complications, age ≥65, congestive heart failure, history of myocardial infarction, renal disease, chronic pulmonary disease, Medicare/Medicaid payor, more than two levels fused, transforaminal/posterior lumbar interbody fusion, and female sex, and higher OR for non-White race. For readmission, obese patients had lower OR for age ≥65, history of MI, renal disease, and mental health disease, and higher OR for female sex. For revision, obese patients had higher OR for female sex and TLIF/PLIF. For infection, obese patients had lower OR for diabetes with and without chronic complications, and higher OR for female sex.
Many medical comorbidities have less impact in obese patients than nonobese patients in predicting adverse outcomes despite increased rates of adverse outcomes in obese patients. These findings reflect the impact of obesity as an independent risk factor and have important implications for preoperative optimization.Level of Evidence: 3.
回顾性病例对照研究。
本研究旨在确定肥胖对腰椎融合术后不良结局危险因素的影响。
肥胖是腰椎融合术后并发症的危险因素,对护理优化提出了独特的挑战。尽管如此,这类患者人群尚未得到充分研究。
从国家住院患者数据库中确定接受腰椎融合术的成年患者。使用 ICD-9 代码将患者分为肥胖或非肥胖。主要结局变量为 90 天内再入院、主要医疗并发症、感染和翻修率。查询了人口统计学、合并症、手术特征和结局变量的数据。采用逻辑多元回归,在每个结局的单独模型中依次测试肥胖与其他独立变量之间的交互作用。使用 Benjamini-Hochberg 程序对多个比较进行统计学意义调整。
共纳入 262153 例患者:肥胖 31062 例,非肥胖 231091 例。对于主要并发症,与非肥胖患者相比,肥胖患者的脑血管意外、有慢性并发症的糖尿病、年龄≥65 岁、充血性心力衰竭、心肌梗死史、肾脏疾病、慢性肺部疾病、医疗保险/医疗补助支付者、融合节段数>2 个、经椎间孔/后路腰椎间融合术和女性的比值比(OR)较低,而非白种人的 OR 较高。对于再入院,肥胖患者的年龄≥65 岁、心肌梗死史、肾脏疾病和精神疾病的 OR 较低,女性的 OR 较高。对于翻修,肥胖患者的女性和 TLIF/PLIF 的 OR 较高。对于感染,肥胖患者的糖尿病合并或不合并慢性并发症的 OR 较低,女性的 OR 较高。
尽管肥胖患者的不良结局发生率较高,但在预测不良结局方面,许多合并症对肥胖患者的影响小于非肥胖患者。这些发现反映了肥胖作为独立危险因素的影响,对术前优化具有重要意义。
3 级。