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Classifying Complications: Assessing Adult Spinal Deformity 2-Year Surgical Outcomes.
- Klineberg, Eric O;
- Passias, Peter G;
- Poorman, Gregory W;
- Jalai, Cyrus M;
- Atanda, Abiola;
- Worley, Nancy;
- Horn, Samantha;
- Sciubba, Daniel M;
- Hamilton, D Kojo;
- Burton, Douglas C;
- Gupta, Munish Chandra;
- Smith, Justin S;
- Soroceanu, Alexandra;
- Hart, Robert A;
- Neuman, Brian;
- Ames, Christopher P;
- Schwab, Frank J;
- Lafage, Virginie
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1177/2192568220937473Abstract
Study design
Retrospective review of prospective database.Objective
Complication rates for adult spinal deformity (ASD) surgery vary widely because there is no accepted system for categorization. Our objective was to identify the impact of complication occurrence, minor-major complication, and Clavien-Dindo complication classification (Cc) on clinical variables and patient-reported outcomes.Methods
Complications in surgical ASD patients with complete baseline and 2-year data were considered intraoperatively, perioperatively (<6 weeks), and postoperatively (>6 weeks). Primary outcome measures were complication timing and severity according to 3 scales: complication presence (yes/no), minor-major, and Cc score. Secondary outcomes were surgical outcomes (estimated blood loss [EBL], length of stay [LOS], reoperation) and health-related quality of life (HRQL) scores. Univariate analyses determined complication presence, type, and Cc grade impact on operative variables and on HRQL scores.Results
Of 167 patients, 30.5% (n = 51) had intraoperative, 48.5% (n = 81) had perioperative, and 58.7% (n = 98) had postoperative complications. Major intraoperative complications were associated with increased EBL (P < .001) and LOS (P = .0092). Postoperative complication presence and major postoperative complication were associated with reoperation (P < .001). At 2 years, major perioperative complications were associated with worse ODI, SF-36, and SRS activity and appearance scores (P < .02). Increasing perioperative Cc score and postoperative complication presence were the best predictors of worse HRQL outcomes (P < .05).Conclusion
The Cc Scale was most useful in predicting changes in patient outcomes; at 2 years, patients with raised perioperative Cc scores and postoperative complications saw reduced HRQL improvement. Intraoperative and perioperative complications were associated with worse short-term surgical and inpatient outcomes.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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