Sheehan Connor, Mohamed Ayman, Schwab Frank, Burton Douglas, Okonkwo David, Eastlack Robert, Kim Han J, Klineberg Eric, Hamilton KoJo, Bess Shay, Lafage Renaud, Lafage Virginie
Lewis Katz School of Medicine, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Lenox Hill Hospital, Northwell Health, New York, NY, USA.
Global Spine J. 2025 May;15(4):2109-2117. doi: 10.1177/21925682241286445. Epub 2024 Sep 18.
Study DesignCase-based survey.ObjectivesThis study aims to investigate what a group of surgeons learned from their own revisions, and what they would do differently today.MethodsA multi-center database of ASD surgical patients was queried to identify those with at least 2 surgical procedures performed by the same surgeon between 2009 and 2019. A clinical vignette was created for each case including demographics, a timeline of events, radiographs/measurements, patient-reported outcomes, complications, and surgical strategies used for the index and revision surgeries. The operative surgeon was then asked to fill out a five-question survey aimed at determining factors that contribute to operative decision-making and planning.Results86 patients were operated on by 6 participating surgeons for both index and revision ASD surgery. The revised patients had similar follow-up compared to the non-revised group ( = 0.73), with the most common complications indicating a need for revision surgery being proximal junctional failure (42%) and pseudoarthrosis (28%). Surgeons reported that they would not change their surgical strategy in 52.3% of the cases. The leading cause for revision was hardware/instrumentation issues (24.4%). Learning points included rod-related choice (23.3%), level selection (19.8), PJF prophylactic strategy (15.1%), and sagittal alignment objective (11.6%).ConclusionsSurgeons saw opportunity in nearly half of the cases to improve outcomes by changing something in the original surgery. While 40% of the failures remained unexplained from the surgeons' perspective, this study highlights the capacity for adopting changes in adult spinal deformity surgery and illuminates the reasoning behind certain surgical decisions.
研究设计
基于病例的调查。
目的
本研究旨在调查一组外科医生从他们自己的翻修手术中学到了什么,以及他们如今会采取哪些不同的做法。
方法
查询一个多中心的成人脊柱畸形(ASD)手术患者数据库,以识别在2009年至2019年间由同一位外科医生进行了至少2次手术的患者。为每个病例创建了一个临床案例,包括人口统计学信息、事件时间表、X线片/测量结果、患者报告的结局、并发症以及初次手术和翻修手术所采用的手术策略。然后要求手术医生填写一份包含五个问题的调查问卷,旨在确定有助于手术决策和规划的因素。
结果
6位参与研究的外科医生对86例患者进行了初次和翻修ASD手术。与未进行翻修的组相比,接受翻修的患者随访情况相似(P = 0.73),最常见的表明需要进行翻修手术的并发症是近端交界性失败(42%)和假关节形成(28%)。外科医生报告称,在52.3%的病例中他们不会改变手术策略。翻修的主要原因是内固定/器械问题(24.4%)。学习要点包括与棒相关的选择(23.3%)、节段选择(有19.8%)、近端交界性失败预防性策略(15.1%)和矢状面排列目标(11.6%)。
结论
外科医生发现在近一半的病例中有机会通过改变初次手术中的某些操作来改善治疗效果。虽然从外科医生的角度来看,40%的失败原因仍不明确,但本研究强调了在成人脊柱畸形手术中采用改变的能力,并阐明了某些手术决策背后的理由。