Abstract

To determine the incidence and demographic characteristics of shoulder stabilization in the United States, with particular focus on age, sex, and inpatient versus outpatient treatment. The National Hospital Discharge Survey and the National Survey of Ambulatory Surgery databases were searched using a combination of International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision diagnosis and procedure codes, encompassing open and arthroscopic shoulder stabilization procedures. Incidence was determined using National Survey of Ambulatory Surgery, National Hospital Discharge Survey, and US census data, and the results were stratified by age, sex, facility, and concomitant diagnoses. Data were analyzed between 1994 and 2006, the most recent year for which data are available within these sources. The incidence of shoulder stabilization in the United States was 5.84 per 100,000 person-years (n= 15,514; 95% confidence interval, 11,975-19,053) in 1994 to 1996 and 6.89 per 100,000 person-years (n= 20,588; 95% confidence interval, 16,254-24,922) in 2006 (P= .0697). The number of inpatient procedures decreased significantly whereas the number of outpatient procedures increased significantly over the same period (P < .0001 for both). The incidence of stabilization increased in patients aged 45 to 64years (P < .0001) and patients aged 65years or older (P= .0008) but was unchanged in patients aged 44years or younger (P= .4745). The average age of patients undergoing stabilization increased over the study period, from 30years to 47years for inpatients (P= .01) and from 27years to 34years for ambulatory patients (P= .05). The incidence of stabilization increased significantly in male patients (P= .0075) but remained stable in female patients (P= .8057) over the same period. Diagnoses related to rotator cuff pathology and shoulder derangement were the most common concurrent diagnosis codes. The overall incidence of shoulder stabilization in the United States is 6.89 per 100,000 person-years. The incidence increased by 18% between 1994 and 2006. During the study period, shoulder stabilization shifted to become a largely outpatient procedure, and the average age increased significantly. Level IV, therapeutic case series.

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