Lafage Renaud, Sheehan Connor, Smith Justin S, Daniels Alan, Diebo Bassel, Ames Christopher, Bess Shay, Eastlack Robert, Gupta Munish, Hostin Richard, Kim Han Jo, Klineberg Eric, Mundis Gregory, Hamilton Kojo, Shaffrey Christopher, Schwab Frank, Lafage Virginie, Burton Douglas
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Northwell Health, Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, NY, USA.
Lewis Katz School of Medicine, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Global Spine J. 2025 May;15(4):2087-2095. doi: 10.1177/21925682241283724. Epub 2024 Sep 5.
Study DesignRetrospective Cohort Study.ObjectivesLength of Stay (LOS) and resource utilization are of primary importance for hospital administration. This study aimed to understand the incremental effect of having a specific complication on LOS among ASD patients.MethodsA retrospective examination of prospective multicenter data utilized patients without a complication prior to discharge to develop a patient-adjusted and surgery-adjusted predictive model of LOS among ASD patients. The model was later applied to patients with at least 1 complication prior to discharge to investigate incremental effect of each identified complication on LOS vs the expected LOS.Results571/1494 (38.2%) patients experienced at least 1 complication before discharge with a median LOS of 7 [IQR 5 to 9]. Univariate analysis demonstrated that LOS was significantly affected by patients' demographics (age, CCI, sex, disability, deformity) and surgical strategy (invasiveness, fusion length, posterior MIS fusion, direct decompression, osteotomy severity, IBF use, EBL, ASA, ICU stay, day between stages, Date of Sx). Using patients with at least 1 complication prior discharge and compared to the patient-and-surgery adjusted prediction, having a minor complication increased the expected LOS by 0.9 day(s), a major complication by 3.9 days, and a major complication with reoperation by 6.3 days.ConclusionComplications following surgery for ASD correction have different, but predictable impact on LOS. Some complications requiring minimal intervention are associated with significant and substantial increases in LOS, while complications with significant impact on patient quality of life may have no influence on LOS.
研究设计
回顾性队列研究。
目的
住院时间(LOS)和资源利用对医院管理至关重要。本研究旨在了解特定并发症对孤独症谱系障碍(ASD)患者住院时间的增量影响。
方法
对前瞻性多中心数据进行回顾性检查,利用出院前无并发症的患者建立ASD患者住院时间的患者调整和手术调整预测模型。该模型随后应用于出院前至少有1种并发症的患者,以研究每种已识别并发症对住院时间与预期住院时间的增量影响。
结果
571/1494(38.2%)患者在出院前经历了至少1种并发症,中位住院时间为7天[四分位间距5至9天]。单因素分析表明,住院时间受患者人口统计学特征(年龄、Charlson合并症指数、性别、残疾、畸形)和手术策略(侵入性、融合长度后外侧微创融合、直接减压、截骨严重程度、髂骨块植骨使用、估计失血量、美国麻醉医师协会身体状况分级、重症监护病房停留时间、分期间隔天数、手术日期)的显著影响。将出院前至少有1种并发症的患者与患者和手术调整后的预测结果进行比较,发生轻度并发症使预期住院时间增加0.9天,重度并发症增加3.9天,重度并发症并再次手术增加6.3天。
结论
ASD矫正手术后的并发症对住院时间有不同但可预测的影响。一些只需最小干预的并发症与住院时间的显著大幅增加相关,而对患者生活质量有重大影响的并发症可能对住院时间没有影响。