Glenn Eve R, Zhu Alexander R, O'Connell Emily M, Mao Eric, Srikumaran Umasuthan
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
JSES Int. 2025 Feb 6;9(3):837-843. doi: 10.1016/j.jseint.2025.01.010. eCollection 2025 May.
Vitamin D deficiency, or hypovitaminosis D, is linked to poor surgical outcomes. Its effect on total shoulder arthroplasty (TSA) remains unclear. This study assesses the association between vitamin D deficiency and postoperative complications following TSA.
Following propensity score matching for demographics and comorbidities, a retrospective cohort of 6892 TSA patients from 95 institutions was analyzed, with 3446 patients in each group (vitamin D deficient and nondeficient). Complications were evaluated at 90 days, 1 year, and 2 years post-TSA, including acute kidney failure (AKF), myocardial infarction, deep vein thrombosis (DVT), pulmonary embolism (PE), pneumonia, mechanical ventilation, wound dehiscence, sepsis, various infections (deep, superficial, and prosthetic), revision surgery, aseptic loosening, prosthesis dislocation, periprosthetic fractures, readmission, and mortality.
Vitamin D deficiency was associated with higher rates of AKF, DVT, PE, pneumonia, and periprosthetic fractures at 90 days, with similar trends persisting at 1 year, except for PE. Additionally, readmission rates were significantly higher in the vitamin D-deficient cohort at 1 year. At 2 years, AKF, DVT, pneumonia, and readmission continued to be significantly associated with vitamin D deficiency, while periprosthetic fractures did not show a significant difference between the cohorts.
Orthopedic surgeons should recognize vitamin D deficiency as a potential modifiable risk factor for postoperative complications in TSA. The observed association between vitamin D deficiency and increased rates of readmission and periprosthetic fractures suggests that addressing vitamin D levels may be linked to reduced future healthcare utilization. While correcting vitamin D deficiency preoperatively may be associated with a reduction in the risk of medical complications and improvement in patient outcomes following TSA, further research is needed to better understand the nature of these relationships.
维生素D缺乏或维生素D不足与手术效果不佳有关。其对全肩关节置换术(TSA)的影响尚不清楚。本研究评估维生素D缺乏与TSA术后并发症之间的关联。
在对人口统计学和合并症进行倾向评分匹配后,分析了来自95家机构的6892例TSA患者的回顾性队列,每组各3446例患者(维生素D缺乏组和非缺乏组)。在TSA术后90天、1年和2年评估并发症,包括急性肾衰竭(AKF)、心肌梗死、深静脉血栓形成(DVT)、肺栓塞(PE)、肺炎、机械通气、伤口裂开、败血症、各种感染(深部、浅表和假体周围感染)、翻修手术、无菌性松动、假体脱位、假体周围骨折、再次入院和死亡率。
维生素D缺乏与90天时AKF、DVT、PE、肺炎和假体周围骨折的发生率较高相关,除PE外,1年时仍存在类似趋势。此外,维生素D缺乏组1年时的再次入院率显著更高。在2年时,AKF、DVT、肺炎和再次入院仍与维生素D缺乏显著相关,而假体周围骨折在两组之间未显示出显著差异。
骨科医生应将维生素D缺乏视为TSA术后并发症的潜在可改变风险因素。维生素D缺乏与再次入院率和假体周围骨折发生率增加之间的观察到的关联表明,解决维生素D水平问题可能与减少未来的医疗保健利用有关。虽然术前纠正维生素D缺乏可能与降低医疗并发症风险和改善TSA术后患者结局相关,但需要进一步研究以更好地理解这些关系的本质。