Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Yale School of Medicine, 47 College St, New Haven, CT 06510, USA.
Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Yale School of Medicine, 47 College St, New Haven, CT 06510, USA.
Spine J. 2023 Oct;23(10):1522-1530. doi: 10.1016/j.spinee.2023.06.384. Epub 2023 Jun 24.
Lumbar discectomy is a common procedure following which emergency department (ED) visits may occur. Although many quality improvement initiatives target reemissions, ED visits may be more common, be a marker of quality of care, affect patient satisfaction, and contribute to health-care resource utilization and costs.
To analyze the timing and risk factors predicting ED utilization following lumbar discectomy and thereby facilitate better-targeted risk reduction.
STUDY DESIGN/SETTING: Retrospective database review of the 2010 to April 30th, 2021, M157Ortho PearlDiver dataset.
Single-level lumbar laminotomy/discectomy between 2010 and April 30th, 2021, in the PearlDiver M157Ortho dataset.
Functional measures-ED utilization in the 90 days following lumbar discectomy, patient-level predictors for ED utilization, and number and type of reoperations performed in the 90 days following lumbar discectomy.
Lumbar laminotomies/discectomies were identified. Patients were excluded if additional procedures were performed or if there was not 90-day follow-up in the dataset. Patient factors were extracted, including age, sex, Elixhauser comorbidity index (ECI), region of the country in which their procedure was performed (Midwest, Northeast, South, West), and patient insurance plan (Commercial, Medicaid, Medicare). The incidence, timing, and frequency of ED utilization within 90 days of lumbar discectomy were then determined. Cohort average weekly ED utilization at 1-year postoperatively was calculated as a baseline for reference. Patient factors predictive of postoperative ED utilization were then determined with univariate and multivariate analyses. Primary diagnoses for ED visits were also categorized. Patients who underwent reoperation for complications related to lumbar discectomy following ED visits were determined, and types of reoperation procedures were characterized.
Of 281,103 lumbar discectomy patients identified, ED visits within 90 days of surgery were identified for 28,632 (10.2%). Of note, 40.4% of these ED visits occurred in the first 2 postoperative weeks. Multivariate analysis revealed several independent predictors of ED utilization following lumbar discectomy, including: younger age (odds ratio [OR] 1.21 per decade decrease), female sex (OR 1.12 relative to male), higher ECI (OR 1.42 per 2-point increase), having surgery performed in the Northeast, Midwest, or West United States (OR 1.05, 1.17, and 1.13, respectively, relative to South), and Medicaid coverage (OR 1.89 relative to Medicare). Forty-three percent of ED visits were surgical site related, of which surgical site pain predominated at 34.2% of overall reasons. Of patients who visited the ED, 943 (3.3%) underwent reoperation in the subsequent 2 weeks. Laminectomy with nerve root decompression was the most performed reoperation (30.9%), followed by incision and drainage (22.5%), posterior nonsegmental instrumentation (10.3%), laminectomy facetectomy and foraminotomy (9.97%), repair of dural/CSF leak or pseudomeningocele with laminectomy (9.3%), repair of dural/CSF leak not requiring laminectomy (8.9%), arthrodesis (4.3%), and posterior segmental instrumentation (3.9%).
Following lumbar discectomy, over 1 in 10 patients were found to visit the ED in the 90 days following their surgery, most commonly in the first 2 postoperative weeks. Specific patient characteristics were associated with such ED visits, with the most common primary diagnoses among ED visitors being surgical site pain. About 3.3% of patients who visited the ED underwent reoperation in the subsequent 2 weeks. Through identification of the timing, risk factors, primary reasons for, and risk of reoperation following ED utilization in the 90-day period after lumbar discectomy, care pathways can be modified to improve patient satisfaction, outcomes, and reduce excess health-care expenditures.
腰椎间盘切除术是一种常见的手术,术后可能会出现急诊部(ED)就诊。尽管许多质量改进计划针对再入院率,但 ED 就诊可能更为常见,是医疗质量的标志,会影响患者满意度,并导致医疗资源利用和成本增加。
分析腰椎间盘切除术后 90 天内 ED 利用的时间和风险因素,从而更好地有针对性地降低风险。
研究设计/设置:对 2010 年至 2021 年 4 月 30 日 M157Ortho PearlDiver 数据集的回顾性数据库进行回顾。
PearlDiver M157Ortho 数据集中 2010 年至 4 月 30 日之间进行的单节段腰椎板切开术/椎间盘切除术。
腰椎间盘切除术后 90 天内的功能指标-ED 利用情况、ED 利用的患者水平预测因素以及腰椎间盘切除术后 90 天内进行的再手术数量和类型。
确定腰椎板切开术/椎间盘切除术。如果进行了其他手术或数据集中没有 90 天的随访,则排除患者。提取患者因素,包括年龄、性别、Elixhauser 合并症指数(ECI)、手术所在国家/地区(中西部、东北部、南部、西部)和患者保险计划(商业、医疗补助、医疗保险)。然后确定腰椎间盘切除术后 90 天内 ED 利用的发生率、时间和频率。术后 1 年的每周平均 ED 利用情况作为参考计算。然后用单变量和多变量分析确定术后 ED 利用的预测因素。还对 ED 就诊的主要诊断进行了分类。确定了因腰椎间盘切除术相关并发症而在 ED 就诊后接受再手术的患者,并对再手术程序的类型进行了描述。
在确定的 281103 例腰椎间盘切除术患者中,在手术后 90 天内发现 28632 例(10.2%)发生 ED 就诊。值得注意的是,其中 40.4%的 ED 就诊发生在术后前 2 周内。多变量分析显示,腰椎间盘切除术后 ED 利用的几个独立预测因素包括:年龄较小(每十年降低 1.21 倍)、女性(与男性相比为 1.12)、ECI 较高(每增加 2 分增加 1.42 倍)、在美国东北部、中西部或西部进行手术(分别为 1.05、1.17 和 1.13,与南部相比)和 Medicaid 覆盖(与 Medicare 相比为 1.89)。43%的 ED 就诊与手术部位有关,其中手术部位疼痛占所有原因的 34.2%。在 ED 就诊的患者中,943 例(3.3%)在随后的 2 周内接受了再手术。最常进行的再手术是椎板切除术和神经根减压术(30.9%),其次是切开引流术(22.5%)、非节段性后器械固定术(10.3%)、椎板切除术关节突切除术和椎间孔切开术(9.97%)、修补硬脑膜/CSF 漏或假性脑膜膨出的椎板切除术(9.3%)、无需椎板切除术的硬脑膜/CSF 漏修补术(8.9%)、融合术(4.3%)和后节段性器械固定术(3.9%)。
腰椎间盘切除术后,超过 10%的患者在手术后 90 天内到 ED 就诊,最常见的是在术后前 2 周内。特定的患者特征与这些 ED 就诊有关,ED 就诊者最常见的主要诊断是手术部位疼痛。约 3.3%的 ED 就诊患者在随后的 2 周内接受了再手术。通过确定腰椎间盘切除术后 90 天内 ED 利用的时间、风险因素、ED 利用的主要原因和再手术的风险,可以修改护理途径,以提高患者满意度、改善结果并减少过度的医疗保健支出。