Abstract
<h3>BACKGROUND CONTEXT</h3> Surgical correction of adult spinal deformity (ASD) has been associated with superior alignment and functional outcomes. However, postoperative complication rates remain relatively high. The extent to which potentially modifiable patient-related factors can influence complication rates in adult spinal deformity patients has not been effectively evaluated. <h3>PURPOSE</h3> Evaluate the association between modifiable patient-related factors on complications following ASD corrective surgery. <h3>STUDY DESIGN/SETTING</h3> Retrospective. <h3>PATIENT SAMPLE</h3> A total of 689 ASD patients. <h3>OUTCOME MEASURES</h3> Complication and reoperation rates. <h3>METHODS</h3> ASD patients with 2-year (2Y) data were included. Complication groups were defined as follows: 1) any complication; 2) major; 3) medical (cardiac event, ileus, etc.); surgical (site infection, wound dehiscence, etc.); 5) major mechanical (implant failure, rod fracture); 6) major radiographic (PJF [proximal junctional failure], pseudarthrosis, adjacent segment disease); and 7) reoperation. Modifiable risk factors included current smoker, obesity (BMI >30kg/m<sup>2</sup>), osteoporosis, alcohol use, depression (BL SF-36 MCS <35, perMatcham), psychiatric diagnosis and hypertension. Patients were stratified by BL deformity severity in T1PA (LowDef/HighDef) and age above or below 65 (Young/Older). Means comparison tests assessed prevalence of modifiable risk factors present in those developing specified complications. Binary logistic regression analysis was used to adjust for confounders. <h3>RESULTS</h3> A total of 480 ASD patients met inclusion criteria (age 59±15 yrs, 77%F, BMI 27±5 kg/m<sup>2</sup>, CCI: 1.7±1.7). By 2Y, comp rates: 72% one complication, 28% major, 21% medical, 27% surgical, 11% major radiographic, and 8% had a major mechanical complication. A total of 106 patients (22%) required reoperation. Overall, 318 patients (66%) had at least one of the preoperative risk factors. Age-Deformity Groups: 32% Young LowDef, 19% Young HighDef, 18% Older LowDef, 31% Older HighDef. Within Young LowDef, patients with osteoporosis were more likely to suffer either a major mechanical or radiographic comp (both OR >6, p<.05), although this trend was not seen in the overall cohort. Young HighDef patients were much more likely to develop complications if obese, especially major mechanical complications (OR: 2.8, [1.04-8.6]; p=.045), while patients with depression or a psychiatric diagnosis suffered major radiographic comps and underwent reoperation more often. Older patients with HighDef developed significantly more complications when diagnosed with depression, including major radiographic comps (23% vs 8%, OR: 3.5, [1.1-10.6]; p=.03). Overall, when controlling for baseline deformity, frailty, and osteoporosis, a diagnosis of depression proved to be a significant risk factor for development of major radiographic complications (OR: 2.4, [1.3-4.5]; p=.005). <h3>CONCLUSIONS</h3> Certain modifiable patient-related factors, especially mental health status, are associated with increased risk for complications following spinal deformity surgery. Therefore, with consideration to clinical presentation, elaborate on the utility in medical intervention prior to undergoing spinal deformity corrective surgery. <h3>FDA DEVICE/DRUG STATUS</h3> This abstract does not discuss or include any applicable devices or drugs.
Published Version
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