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Frequency and Implications of Concurrent Complications Following Adult Spinal Deformity Corrective Surgery

  • Cole Bortz
  • , Katherine E. Pierce
  • , Avery Brown
  • , Haddy Alas
  • , Lara Passfall
  • , Oscar Krol
  • , Nicholas A. Kummer
  • , Erik Wang
  • , Brooke O'Connell
  • , Charles Wang
  • , Dennis Vasquez-Montes
  • , Bassel G. Diebo
  • , Brian J. Neuman
  • , Michael C. Gerling
  • , Peter G. Passias

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Study Design.Retrospective review.Objective.Identify co-occurring perioperative complications and associated predictors in a population of patients undergoing surgery for adult spinal deformity (ASD).Summary of Background Data.Few studies have investigated the development of multiple, co-occurring complications following ASD-corrective surgery. Preoperative risk stratification may benefit from identification of factors associated with multiple, co-occurring complications.Methods.Elective ASD patients in National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP) 2005 to 2016 were isolated; rates of co-occurring complications and affected body systems were assessed via cross tabulation. Random forest analysis identified top patient and surgical factors associated with complication co-occurrence, using conditional inference trees to identify significant cutoff points. Binary logistic regression indicated effect size of top influential factors associated with complication co-occurrence at each factor's respective cutoff point.Results.Included: 6486 ASD patients. The overall perioperative complication rate was 34.8%; 28.5% of patients experienced one complication, 4.5% experienced two, and 1.8% experienced 3+. Overall, 11% of complication co-occurrences were pulmonary/cardiovascular, 9% pulmonary/renal, and 4% integumentary/renal. By complication type, the most common co-occurrences were transfusion/urinary tract infection (UTI) (24.3%) and transfusion/pneumonia (17.7%). Surgical factors of operative time ≥400 minutes and fusion ≥9 levels were the strongest factors associated with the incidence of co-occurring complications, followed by patient-specific variables like American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) physical status classification grade ≥2 and age ≥65 years. Regression analysis further showed associations between increasing complication number and longer length of stay (LOS), (R2= 0.202, P < 0.001), non-home discharge (R2= 0.111, P = 0.001), and readmission (R2= 0.010, P < 0.001).Conclusion.For surgical ASD patients, the overall rate of co-occurring perioperative complications was 6.3%. Body systems most commonly affected by complication co-occurrences were pulmonary and cardiovascular, and common co-occurrences included transfusion/UTI (24.3%) and transfusion/pneumonia (17.7%). Increasing number of perioperative complications was associated with greater LOS, non-home discharge, and readmission, highlighting the importance of identifying risk factors for complication co-occurrences.Level of Evidence: 3.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)E1155-E1160
JournalSpine
Volume46
Issue number21
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 1 2021

Keywords

  • National Surgical Quality Improvement Program
  • adult spinal deformity
  • co-occurrence
  • complications
  • risk
  • risk factors
  • surgery

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