Cause and effect of revisions in adult spinal deformity surgery: a multicenter study on outcomes based on etiology

IF 4.7 1区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Spine Journal Pub Date : 2024-12-18 DOI:10.1016/j.spinee.2024.12.023
Peter G. Passias MD , Pooja Dave BS , Justin S. Smith MD , Renaud Lafage MS , Oluwatobi O. Onafowokan BMBS MSc , Peter Tretiakov BS , Jamshaid Mir MD , Breton Line BS , Bassel Diebo MD , Alan H. Daniels MD , Jeffrey L. Gum MD , Robert Eastlack MD , D. Kojo Hamilton MD , Dean Chou MD , Eric O. Klineberg MD , Khaled M. Kebaish MD , Stephen Lewis MD , Munish C. Gupta MD , Han Jo Kim MD , Lawrence G. Lenke MD , Douglas C. Burton MD
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Yet, little has been explored on the association between the etiology of reoperation and patient outcomes.</div></div><div><h3>PURPOSE</h3><div>To assess the impact of the etiology of revision surgery on postoperative outcomes.</div></div><div><h3>STUDY DESIGN/SETTING</h3><div>Retrospective cohort analysis.</div></div><div><h3>PATIENT SAMPLE</h3><div>A total of 891 ASD patients.</div></div><div><h3>OUTCOME MEASURES</h3><div>Complications, radiographic parameters, disability metrics.</div></div><div><h3>METHODS</h3><div>Operative ASD patients with at least 1 revision stratified by etiology (mechanical [Mech] –pseudarthrosis, thoracic decompensation without junctional failure, X-ray malalignment, implant failure, implant malposition, PJK ± major malalignment; infection [Infx]–early vs late onset, major vs minor; wound [Wound]; SI pain [SI Pain]). Excluded multiple etiologies, and intraoperative or medical complications. Data from the immediate visit prior to the final revision was used as baseline (rBL). Follow-up based on visits best aligned to time points after final revision. Radiographic parameters SVA, PI-LL, and PT were used to assess alignment postrevision via ANOVA. Multivariate analysis controlling for relevant covariates assessed outcome differences after final revision surgery.</div></div><div><h3>RESULTS</h3><div>In total, 891 met inclusion (Age: 60.40±14.17, 77% F, BMI: 27.97±5.87 kg/m2, CCI: 1.80±1.73). Etiology groups were as follows: Mech: 432; Infx: 296; Wound: 65; SI Pain: 98. Surgically, Infx had lower rates of osteotomy, interbody fusion, and decompression (p&lt;.05). Infx and SI Pain demonstrated similar correction in radiographics SVA, PI-LL, and PT (p&gt;.05), whereas Mech had significantly less improvement by 2 years (p&lt;.003) that improved by 5 years. Compared to without revision, the odds of MCID in ODI were 48.6% lower across groups (OR: 0.514 [.280, .945], p=.032). Indications of X-ray malalignment were 93.0% less likely to reach MCID (OR: 0.071, [.006, .866], p=.038). Similarly, implant failure negatively impacted rates of MCID (40% vs 15.2%, p=.029). Those with PJK had 57% lower odds of MCID (33% vs 54%, OR: .43, [0.2, 0.9] p= .023), further negated by major malalignment (OR: 0.05, [.07, .97], p=.02). Indications of pseudarthrosis, thoracic decompensation, implant malposition were not significant. Major sepsis had lower rates of MCID compared to minor (6.4% vs 21.2%), and early onset infection improved compared to late (OR: 1.43, [1.17, 2.98], p&lt;.001). In the early follow-up period, the Mech group has significantly worse SRS Pain and Mental Health scores compared to other groups (1-year: Mech 1.56 vs Infx 0.83 vs SI Pain 0.72, p&lt;.001; 2-year: 1.88 vs 0.71 vs 0.76, p=.034). Complication rates increased with the number of revisions and with mechanical indication (all p&lt;.05). At 5 years, patient satisfaction was significantly more likely to improve compared to early follow-up (OR: 1.22, p=.011), along with improved pain score, in Mech group (0.89 vs 0.49 vs 0.56, p=.081).</div></div><div><h3>CONCLUSIONS</h3><div>This study focused on the impact of revision as it varies with etiology and time of occurrence postoperatively. Compared to other etiologies, revision surgery due to mechanical complications had less radiographic improvement and worsening patient-reported scores in the early postoperative period despite stabilization at 5 years. The depth of impact of mechanical complication, particularly with the addition of malalignment, merits greater focus during surgical planning.</div></div><div><h3>Level of Evidence</h3><div>III.</div></div>","PeriodicalId":49484,"journal":{"name":"Spine Journal","volume":"25 6","pages":"Pages 1229-1235"},"PeriodicalIF":4.7000,"publicationDate":"2024-12-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Spine Journal","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1529943024012269","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"CLINICAL NEUROLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

BACKGROUND CONTEXT

While the treatment of adult spinal deformity (ASD) has increasingly favored surgical correction, the incidence of revision surgery remains high. Yet, little has been explored on the association between the etiology of reoperation and patient outcomes.

PURPOSE

To assess the impact of the etiology of revision surgery on postoperative outcomes.

STUDY DESIGN/SETTING

Retrospective cohort analysis.

PATIENT SAMPLE

A total of 891 ASD patients.

OUTCOME MEASURES

Complications, radiographic parameters, disability metrics.

METHODS

Operative ASD patients with at least 1 revision stratified by etiology (mechanical [Mech] –pseudarthrosis, thoracic decompensation without junctional failure, X-ray malalignment, implant failure, implant malposition, PJK ± major malalignment; infection [Infx]–early vs late onset, major vs minor; wound [Wound]; SI pain [SI Pain]). Excluded multiple etiologies, and intraoperative or medical complications. Data from the immediate visit prior to the final revision was used as baseline (rBL). Follow-up based on visits best aligned to time points after final revision. Radiographic parameters SVA, PI-LL, and PT were used to assess alignment postrevision via ANOVA. Multivariate analysis controlling for relevant covariates assessed outcome differences after final revision surgery.

RESULTS

In total, 891 met inclusion (Age: 60.40±14.17, 77% F, BMI: 27.97±5.87 kg/m2, CCI: 1.80±1.73). Etiology groups were as follows: Mech: 432; Infx: 296; Wound: 65; SI Pain: 98. Surgically, Infx had lower rates of osteotomy, interbody fusion, and decompression (p<.05). Infx and SI Pain demonstrated similar correction in radiographics SVA, PI-LL, and PT (p>.05), whereas Mech had significantly less improvement by 2 years (p<.003) that improved by 5 years. Compared to without revision, the odds of MCID in ODI were 48.6% lower across groups (OR: 0.514 [.280, .945], p=.032). Indications of X-ray malalignment were 93.0% less likely to reach MCID (OR: 0.071, [.006, .866], p=.038). Similarly, implant failure negatively impacted rates of MCID (40% vs 15.2%, p=.029). Those with PJK had 57% lower odds of MCID (33% vs 54%, OR: .43, [0.2, 0.9] p= .023), further negated by major malalignment (OR: 0.05, [.07, .97], p=.02). Indications of pseudarthrosis, thoracic decompensation, implant malposition were not significant. Major sepsis had lower rates of MCID compared to minor (6.4% vs 21.2%), and early onset infection improved compared to late (OR: 1.43, [1.17, 2.98], p<.001). In the early follow-up period, the Mech group has significantly worse SRS Pain and Mental Health scores compared to other groups (1-year: Mech 1.56 vs Infx 0.83 vs SI Pain 0.72, p<.001; 2-year: 1.88 vs 0.71 vs 0.76, p=.034). Complication rates increased with the number of revisions and with mechanical indication (all p<.05). At 5 years, patient satisfaction was significantly more likely to improve compared to early follow-up (OR: 1.22, p=.011), along with improved pain score, in Mech group (0.89 vs 0.49 vs 0.56, p=.081).

CONCLUSIONS

This study focused on the impact of revision as it varies with etiology and time of occurrence postoperatively. Compared to other etiologies, revision surgery due to mechanical complications had less radiographic improvement and worsening patient-reported scores in the early postoperative period despite stabilization at 5 years. The depth of impact of mechanical complication, particularly with the addition of malalignment, merits greater focus during surgical planning.

Level of Evidence

III.
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成人脊柱畸形手术修复的原因和效果:一项基于病因学的多中心结果研究。
背景背景:虽然成人脊柱畸形(ASD)的治疗越来越倾向于手术矫正,但翻修手术的发生率仍然很高。然而,很少有人探讨再手术的病因与患者预后之间的关系。目的:探讨翻修手术的病因对术后预后的影响。研究设计/设置:回顾性队列分析。患者样本:891例ASD患者。结局指标:并发症、影像学参数、残疾指标。方法:手术ASD患者,至少有1次翻修,按病因分层(机械[Mech] -假关节,胸椎失代偿无连接失败,x线排列错误,假体失败,假体位置错误,PJK±严重对齐错误;感染[Infx]-早发与晚发,严重与轻微;伤口(伤口);SI pain [SI pain])。排除多种病因、术中或内科并发症。在最终修订之前立即就诊的数据作为基线(rBL)。根据最终修订后的最佳时间点进行随访。影像学参数SVA、PI-LL和PT通过方差分析评估校正后的对齐。控制相关协变量的多变量分析评估了最终翻修手术后的结果差异。结果:891例MET纳入(年龄:60.40±14.17,77% F, BMI: 27.97±5.87 KG/M2, CCI:: 1.80±1.73)。病因组如下:机甲:432例;Infx: 296;伤口:65;SI Pain: 98。手术中,Infx的截骨、椎体间融合和减压率较低(p < 0.05),而Mech在2年后的改善率明显较低(p < 0.05)。结论:本研究主要关注翻修的影响,因为翻修的影响随病因和术后发生时间的变化而变化。与其他病因相比,机械性并发症引起的翻修手术在术后早期影像学改善较少,患者报告的评分恶化,尽管术后5年稳定。机械并发症的影响深度,特别是加上不对准,在手术计划中值得更多的关注。证据水平:III。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Spine Journal
Spine Journal 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
8.20
自引率
6.70%
发文量
680
审稿时长
13.1 weeks
期刊介绍: The Spine Journal, the official journal of the North American Spine Society, is an international and multidisciplinary journal that publishes original, peer-reviewed articles on research and treatment related to the spine and spine care, including basic science and clinical investigations. It is a condition of publication that manuscripts submitted to The Spine Journal have not been published, and will not be simultaneously submitted or published elsewhere. The Spine Journal also publishes major reviews of specific topics by acknowledged authorities, technical notes, teaching editorials, and other special features, Letters to the Editor-in-Chief are encouraged.
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Meetings Calendar Editorial Board Table of Contents Dynamic compensation in spinopelvic alignment and its relation to symptom severity in patients with lumbar spinal stenosis. Analysis of the efficacy of Endo-TLIF and OLIF-360 assisted by optical navigation in the treatment of degenerative lumbar spondylolisthesis lesions, a retrospective cohort study.
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