Surgical Specialty Outcome Differences for Major Spinal Procedures in Low-Acuity Patients.

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Global Spine Journal Pub Date : 2024-10-01 DOI:10.1177/21925682241288500
Anthony Price, Christopher File, Alvin LeBlanc, Nathan Fredricks, Rylie Ju, Nathan Pratt, Rishi Lall, Daniel Jupiter
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Abstract

Study design: Retrospective Cohort Study.

Objectives: There is an ongoing debate as to the influence of specialty training on spine surgery. Alomari et al. indicated the influence of specialty on ACDF procedures. However, deeper analysis into other spine procedures and lower-acuity procedures has yet to occur. In this study, we aim to determine if the outcomes of the low American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) classification (ASA 1&2) patients undergoing spine surgery vary based on whether the operating surgeon was an orthopedic surgeon or a neurosurgeon.

Methods: The NSQIP databases from 2015 to 2021 were queried based on the CPT code for nine common spine procedures. Indicators of surgical course and successful outcomes were documented and compared between specialties.

Results: Neurosurgeons had minimally shorter operative times in the ASA 1&2 combined classification (ASA-C) group for cervical, lumbar, and combined spinal procedural groups. Neurosurgeons had a slightly lower percentage of perioperative transfusions in select ASA-C classes. Orthopedic surgeons had shorter lengths of stay for the cervical groups in ASA-C and ASA-1 classes (ASA-1). However, many specialty differences found in spine patients become less pronounced when considering only ASA-1 patients. Finally, postoperative complication outcomes and re-admission were similar between orthopedic and neurological surgeons in all cases.

Conclusions: These results, while statistically significant, are very likely clinically insignificant. They demonstrate that both orthopedic surgeons and neurosurgeons perform spinal surgery exceedingly safely with similarly low complication rates. This lays the groundwork for future exploration and benchmarking of performance in spine surgeries across neurosurgery and orthopedics.

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低敏锐度患者主要脊柱手术的外科专科结果差异。
研究设计研究目的:回顾性队列研究:关于专科培训对脊柱手术的影响一直存在争议。Alomari 等人指出了专科对 ACDF 手术的影响。然而,对其他脊柱手术和低危手术的深入分析尚未出现。在本研究中,我们旨在确定接受脊柱手术的低美国麻醉医师协会(ASA)分级(ASA 1&2)患者的预后是否会因手术外科医生是骨科医生还是神经外科医生而有所不同:根据九种常见脊柱手术的 CPT 代码,查询了 2015 年至 2021 年的 NSQIP 数据库。记录了手术过程和成功结果的指标,并对不同专业进行了比较:在 ASA 1&2 综合分类(ASA-C)组中,神经外科医生在颈椎、腰椎和综合脊柱手术组中的手术时间最短。在特定的 ASA-C 等级中,神经外科医生围手术期输血的比例略低。在 ASA-C 和 ASA-1 等级(ASA-1)的颈椎手术组中,骨科医生的住院时间较短。不过,如果只考虑ASA-1级患者,脊柱患者的许多专科差异就不那么明显了。最后,在所有病例中,骨科医生和神经外科医生的术后并发症结果和再次入院情况相似:这些结果虽然在统计学上意义重大,但在临床上很可能并不重要。这些结果表明,骨科医生和神经外科医生进行脊柱手术都非常安全,并发症发生率同样很低。这为今后探索脊柱手术在神经外科和骨科中的表现并设定基准奠定了基础。
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来源期刊
Global Spine Journal
Global Spine Journal Medicine-Surgery
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
8.30%
发文量
278
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: Global Spine Journal (GSJ) is the official scientific publication of AOSpine. A peer-reviewed, open access journal, devoted to the study and treatment of spinal disorders, including diagnosis, operative and non-operative treatment options, surgical techniques, and emerging research and clinical developments.GSJ is indexed in PubMedCentral, SCOPUS, and Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI).
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