White Christopher A, Duey Akiro, Zaidat Bashar, Li Troy, Quinones Addison, Cho Samuel K, Kim Jun S, Cagle Paul J
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, 425 West 59th Street, New York, NY, 10019, USA.
J Orthop. 2023 Feb 16;37:69-74. doi: 10.1016/j.jor.2023.02.007. eCollection 2023 Mar.
Increasing age has been associated with adverse outcomes in various orthopedic procedures including anatomic total shoulder arthroplasty (aTSA). Moreover, both indications and the ages at which the procedure is done has expanded. For these reasons, it is important to characterize the impact age has on complication and readmission rates following shoulder replacement.
The National Readmissions Database was used to identify patients who underwent aTSA between the years 2016-2018. Patients were stratified into five cohorts based on age at surgery: 18-49, 50-59, 60-69, 70-79, and 80+ years old. We analyzed and compared data related to patient demographics, length of stay, readmission and complication rates, and healthcare charges. A multivariate analysis was used to identify the independent impact of age on complication rates.
42,505 patients were included with 1,541, 6,552, 16,364, 14,694, 3,354, patients in the 18-49, 50-59, 60-69, 70-79, and 80+ years old cohorts respectively. Length of stay had a stepwise increase with age increases (p < 0.001), however total charges were comparable between cohorts (p = 0.40). Older patients were more likely to experience intraoperative complications, pulmonary embolism complications, and postoperative infection, but were less likely to experience hardware, surgical site, and prosthetic joint complications. Older patients had higher rates of readmission. Age was an independent predictor for higher 30-/90-day readmission, postoperative/intraoperative complication, and respiratory complication rates. Increasing age provided a protective measure for prosthetic complications surgical site infection.
This study identified multiple differences in complication rates following aTSA based on age at surgery. Overall, age had varying effects on intraoperative and postoperative complication rates at short-term follow-up. However, increasing age was associated with longer lengths of stay and increased readmission rates. Surgeons should be aware of the identified complications that are most prevalent in each age group and use this information to avoid adverse outcomes following shoulder replacement surgery.
在包括解剖型全肩关节置换术(aTSA)在内的各种骨科手术中,年龄增长与不良预后相关。此外,该手术的适应证和实施年龄范围均有所扩大。因此,明确年龄对肩关节置换术后并发症和再入院率的影响十分重要。
利用国家再入院数据库识别2016年至2018年间接受aTSA的患者。根据手术时的年龄将患者分为五个队列:18 - 49岁、50 - 59岁、60 - 69岁、70 - 79岁和80岁及以上。我们分析并比较了与患者人口统计学、住院时间、再入院率和并发症发生率以及医疗费用相关的数据。采用多因素分析确定年龄对并发症发生率的独立影响。
共纳入42,505例患者,其中18 - 49岁队列有1,541例,50 - 59岁队列有6,552例,60 - 69岁队列有16,364例,70 - 79岁队列有14,694例,80岁及以上队列有3,354例。住院时间随年龄增长呈逐步增加(p < 0.001),然而各队列之间的总费用相当(p = 0.40)。老年患者更易发生术中并发症、肺栓塞并发症和术后感染,但发生硬件、手术部位和人工关节并发症的可能性较小。老年患者的再入院率较高。年龄是30/90天再入院率、术后/术中并发症率和呼吸并发症率升高的独立预测因素。年龄增长为假体并发症和手术部位感染提供了一种保护作用。
本研究确定了基于手术时年龄的aTSA术后并发症发生率的多种差异。总体而言,在短期随访中,年龄对术中及术后并发症发生率有不同影响。然而,年龄增长与住院时间延长和再入院率增加相关。外科医生应了解各年龄组中最常见的已确定并发症,并利用这些信息避免肩关节置换手术后的不良后果。