1Departments of Orthopedic and Neurological Surgery, NYU Langone Orthopedic Hospital, New York Spine Institute, New York, New York.
2Departments of Orthopedics and Physical Rehabilitation, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts.
Neurosurg Focus. 2023 Sep;55(3):E9. doi: 10.3171/2023.6.FOCUS23304.
The objective of this study was to assess whether delaying surgical management of cervical deformity (CD) in patients with concomitant mild myelopathy increases the risk of suboptimal outcomes.
Patients aged ≥ 18 years who had a baseline diagnosis of mild myelopathy with baseline and up to 2 years of postoperative data were assessed. Patients were categorized as having CD (CD+) or not (CD-) at baseline. Patients with symptoms of myelopathy for more than 1 year after the initial visit prior to surgery were considered delayed. Clinical and radiographic data were assessed using means comparison analyses. Multivariate regression analysis assessed correlations between increasing time to surgery and peri- and postoperative outcomes adjusted for baseline age and frailty score. Backstep logistic regression analysis assessed the risk of complications or reoperation, while controlling for baseline T1 slope minus cervical lordosis (TS-CL).
One hundred six patients were included (mean age 58.11 ± 11.97 years, 48% female, mean BMI 29.13 ± 6.89). Of the patients with baseline mild myelopathy, 22 (20.8%) were CD- while 84 (79.2%) were CD+. Overall, 9.5% of patients were considered to have delayed surgery. Linear regression revealed that both CD- and CD+ patients were more likely to require reoperation when there was more time between the initial visit and surgical admission (p < 0.001). Additionally, an adjusted logistic regression indicated that CD+ patients who had a greater length of time to surgery had a higher likelihood for major complications (p < 0.001). Conversely, CD+ patients who were operated on within 30 days of the initial visit had a significantly lower risk for a major complication (OR 0.901, 95% CI 0.889-1.105, p = 0.043), and a lower risk for reoperation (OR 0.954, 95% CI 0.877-1.090, p = 0.043), while controlling for the severity of deformity based on baseline TS-CL.
The findings of this study demonstrate that a delay in surgery after the initial visit significantly increases the risk for major complications and reoperation in patients with CD with associated mild baseline myelopathy. Early operative treatment in this patient population may lower the risk of postoperative complications.
本研究旨在评估颈椎畸形(CD)伴轻度脊髓病患者延迟手术治疗是否会增加手术结果不理想的风险。
评估基线诊断为轻度脊髓病且有基线和最多 2 年术后数据的年龄≥18 岁的患者。基线时将患者分为有 CD(CD+)或无 CD(CD-)。手术前初始就诊后脊髓病症状持续超过 1 年的患者被认为是延迟手术。采用均值比较分析评估临床和影像学数据。多变量回归分析评估了手术时间增加与术后并发症之间的相关性,调整了基线年龄和虚弱评分。后退逻辑回归分析评估了在控制基线 T1 斜率减去颈椎前凸(TS-CL)的情况下,并发症或再次手术的风险。
共纳入 106 例患者(平均年龄 58.11±11.97 岁,48%为女性,平均 BMI 29.13±6.89)。基线轻度脊髓病患者中,22 例(20.8%)为 CD-,84 例(79.2%)为 CD+。总体而言,9.5%的患者被认为手术延迟。线性回归显示,无论 CD-还是 CD+患者,初始就诊和手术入院之间的时间间隔越长,越有可能需要再次手术(p<0.001)。此外,调整后的逻辑回归表明,CD+患者手术时间越长,发生重大并发症的可能性越高(p<0.001)。相反,CD+患者在初始就诊后 30 天内手术的重大并发症风险显著降低(OR 0.901,95%CI 0.889-1.105,p=0.043),再次手术的风险降低(OR 0.954,95%CI 0.877-1.090,p=0.043),同时控制基于基线 TS-CL 的畸形严重程度。
本研究结果表明,CD 伴轻度基线脊髓病患者初始就诊后手术延迟会显著增加重大并发症和再次手术的风险。该患者人群的早期手术治疗可能会降低术后并发症的风险。