骨质疏松症对腰椎退行性疾病手术治疗后再手术率和并发症影响的系统性回顾和荟萃分析》(Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Osteoporosis on Reoperation Rates and Complications after Surgical Management of Lumbar Degenerative Disease)。
Elizabeth A Lechtholz-Zey, Mina Ayad, Brandon S Gettleman, Emily S Mills, Hannah Shelby, Andy T Ton, Ishan Shah, Jeffrey C Wang, Raymond J Hah, Ram K Alluri
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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:关于骨质疏松症与腰椎退行性疾病患者预后之间的相互作用,研究结果存在相当大的异质性,也缺乏共识。因此,本系统综述和荟萃分析旨在收集和分析骨质疏松症对腰椎退行性疾病手术后的影像学、手术和临床疗效影响的现有数据:为了确定骨质疏松症对腰椎退行性疾病手术治疗后不良后果发生率的影响,我们进行了一项系统性回顾。该方法主要关注放射学结果、再次手术率以及其他医疗和手术并发症。随后,对符合条件的研究进行了荟萃分析:荟萃分析结果表明,骨质疏松症患者的邻近节段疾病(ASD;P=0.015)和骨笼下沉(P=0.001)发生率增加,但再次手术率低于非骨质疏松症患者(7.4% vs. 13.1%;P=0.038)。系统综述还指出,骨矿密度较低的患者的住院时间、总费用、螺钉松动率以及伤口和其他医疗并发症的发生率可能会增加。骨质疏松症患者和非骨质疏松症患者的融合率、患者报告结果和临床结果没有显著差异:结论:骨质疏松症与 ASD、骨笼移位、术后螺钉松动风险增加以及住院时间延长、费用增加和术后并发症可能性增加有关。然而,骨质疏松症与不良临床结果之间并无关联。
Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of the Effect of Osteoporosis on Reoperation Rates and Complications after Surgical Management of Lumbar Degenerative Disease.
Background: There is considerable heterogeneity in findings and a lack of consensus regarding the interplay between osteoporosis and outcomes in patients with lumbar degenerative spine disease. Therefore, the purpose of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to gather and analyze existing data on the effect of osteoporosis on radiographic, surgical, and clinical outcomes following surgery for lumbar degenerative spinal disease.
Methods: A systematic review was performed to determine the effect of osteoporosis on the incidence of adverse outcomes after surgical intervention for lumbar degenerative spinal diseases. The approach focused on the radiographic outcomes, reoperation rates, and other medical and surgical complications. Subsequently, a meta-analysis was performed on the eligible studies.
Results: The results of the meta-analysis suggested that osteoporotic patients experienced increased rates of adjacent segment disease (ASD; p=0.015) and cage subsidence (p=0.001) while demonstrating lower reoperation rates than non-osteoporotic patients (7.4% vs. 13.1%; p=0.038). The systematic review also indicated that the length of stay, overall costs, rates of screw loosening, and rates of wound and other medical complications may increase in patients with a lower bone mineral density. Fusion rates, as well as patient-reported and clinical outcomes, did not differ significantly between osteoporotic and non-osteoporotic patients.
Conclusions: Osteoporosis was associated with an increased risk of ASD, cage migration, and possibly postoperative screw loosening, as well as longer hospital stays, incurring higher costs and an increased likelihood of postoperative complications. However, a link was not established between osteoporosis and poor clinical outcomes.