Findlay Matthew C, Kim Robert B, Warner Wesley S, Sherrod Brandon A, Park Seojin, Mazur Marcus D, Mahan Mark A
School of Medicine, University of Utah Health, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.
Department of Neurosurgery, University of Utah Health, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.
Global Spine J. 2024 Jun;14(5):1532-1541. doi: 10.1177/21925682221149390. Epub 2023 Jan 9.
Retrospective cohort study.
To identify whether thresholds exist beyond which operative duration or age increases risks for complications among patients ≥65 years undergoing elective spine surgery.
Elective inpatient spine procedures unrelated to infection/trauma/tumor diagnoses in patients <65 years recorded in the 2006-2019 American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement database were identified. Univariate analyses was used to compare 30 day complication rates among 5 operative duration and age-stratified groups. To quantify the risk of prolonged operative duration on complications, multivariate analyses were performed controlling for confounders. A generalized linear model was used to assess the individual and combined effect strength of age and operative duration on complication rates.
Among 87,705 patients stratified by operative duration, 30 day complication rates rose nonlinearly as operative duration increased, with a sharp rise after 4.0-4.9 hours (28.3% at 4.0-4.9 hours, 51.7% at ≥5 hours, < .001). Multivariate analysis found operative duration was independently associated with increased risk of overall complications (odds ratio 1.10→1.69, .001) and medical complications (odds ratio 1.19→1.98, < .001). Although complication rates rose by age (all < .001), age was not independently predictive of overall complications within any operative duration group on multivariate analysis. Operative duration had a greater effect (η = .067) than age (η = .003) on overall complication rates.
Increased operative duration was strongly associated with 30 day complication rates, particularly beyond a threshold of 5 hours. Furthermore, operative duration had a notably larger effect on overall complication rates than age.
回顾性队列研究。
确定在接受择期脊柱手术的65岁及以上患者中,手术时长或年龄是否存在导致并发症风险增加的阈值。
在2006 - 2019年美国外科医师学会国家外科质量改进数据库中,识别年龄小于65岁、与感染/创伤/肿瘤诊断无关的择期住院脊柱手术病例。采用单因素分析比较5个手术时长和年龄分层组的30天并发症发生率。为量化手术时长延长对并发症的风险,进行多因素分析以控制混杂因素。使用广义线性模型评估年龄和手术时长对并发症发生率的个体及综合影响强度。
在按手术时长分层的87,705例患者中,30天并发症发生率随手术时长增加呈非线性上升,在4.0 - 4.9小时后急剧上升(4.0 - 4.9小时为28.3%,≥5小时为51.7%,P <.001)。多因素分析发现手术时长与总体并发症风险增加独立相关(比值比1.10→1.69,P =.001)和医疗并发症(比值比1.19→1.98,P <.001)。尽管并发症发生率随年龄上升(均P <.001),但在多因素分析中,年龄在任何手术时长组内均不能独立预测总体并发症。手术时长对总体并发症发生率的影响(η =.067)大于年龄(η =.003)。
手术时长增加与30天并发症发生率密切相关,尤其是超过5小时的阈值。此外,手术时长对总体并发症发生率的影响明显大于年龄。