Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of California, Davis Medical Center, Sacramento, CA.
Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, NY.
Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2022 Mar 15;47(6):445-454. doi: 10.1097/BRS.0000000000004289.
Retrospective review of prospectively collected multicenter registry data.
To identify rates and timing of postoperative complications in adult spinal deformity (ASD) patients, the impact of complication type and timing on health related quality of life (HRQoL) outcomes, and the impact of complication timing on readmission and reoperation rates. Better understanding of complication timing and impact on HRQoL may improve patient selection, preoperative counseling, and postoperative complication surveillance.
ASD is common and associated with significant disability. Surgical correction is often pursued, but is associated with high complication rates. The International Spine Study Group, AO Spinal Deformity Forum, and European Spine Study Group have developed a new complication classification system for ASD (ISSG-AO spine complications classification system).
The ISSG-AO spine complications classification system was utilized to assess complications occurring over the 2-year postoperative time period amongst a multicenter, prospectively enrolled cohort of patients who underwent surgery for ASD. Kaplan-Meier survival curves were established for each complication type. Propensity score matching was performed to adjust for baseline disability and comorbidities. Associations between each complication type and HRQoL, and reoperation/readmission and complication timing, were assessed.
Of 584 patients meeting inclusion criteria, cardiopulmonary, gastrointestinal, infection, early adverse events, and operative complications contributed to a rapid initial decrease in complication-free survival. Implant-related, radiographic, and neurologic complications substantially decreased long-term complication-free survival. Only radiographic and implant-related complications were significantly associated with worse 2-year HRQoL outcomes. Need for readmission and/or reoperation was most frequent among those experiencing complications after postoperative day 90.
Surgeons should recognize that long-term complications have a substantial negative impact on HRQoL, and should carefully monitor for implant-related and radiographic complications over long-term follow-up.Level of Evidence: 4.
前瞻性收集的多中心登记数据的回顾性研究。
确定成人脊柱畸形(ASD)患者术后并发症的发生率和时间,并发症类型和时间对健康相关生活质量(HRQoL)结果的影响,以及并发症时间对再入院和再手术率的影响。更好地了解并发症的时间和对 HRQoL 的影响可能会改善患者选择、术前咨询和术后并发症监测。
ASD 很常见,且与显著的残疾有关。通常会进行手术矫正,但与高并发症发生率相关。国际脊柱研究协会、AO 脊柱畸形研究组和欧洲脊柱研究协会已经为 ASD 开发了一种新的并发症分类系统(ISSG-AO 脊柱并发症分类系统)。
使用 ISSG-AO 脊柱并发症分类系统评估了在多中心前瞻性入组的 ASD 手术患者术后 2 年期间发生的并发症。为每种并发症类型建立 Kaplan-Meier 生存曲线。使用倾向评分匹配来调整基线残疾和合并症。评估每种并发症类型与 HRQoL 以及再手术/再入院和并发症时间之间的关系。
在符合纳入标准的 584 名患者中,心肺、胃肠道、感染、早期不良事件和手术并发症导致无并发症生存迅速下降。植入物相关、影像学和神经并发症大大降低了长期无并发症生存。只有影像学和植入物相关并发症与 2 年 HRQoL 结果显著相关。在术后第 90 天以后出现并发症的患者中,再入院和/或再手术的需求最为频繁。
外科医生应认识到长期并发症对 HRQoL 有重大负面影响,应在长期随访中仔细监测与植入物相关和影像学相关的并发症。
4 级。