Abstract

Parkinson disease (PD) is a risk factor for worse surgical outcomes. The degree to which PD affects outcomes in cervical spine surgery is not well understood. Therefore, we characterize rates of postoperative complications among patients with PD who undergo cervical spine surgery. Using the PearlDiver database, we identified patients who underwent 1-level anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF), posterior cervical fusion (PCF), or discectomy/decompression with concomitant PD between 2011 and 2019. Patients with PD who underwent surgery and had 1 year follow-up were included. Complications 30, 60, and 90 days after surgery were identified and aggregated into body systems (e.g., respiratory and gastrointestinal). Comparison controls without concomitant PD who received cervical spine (C-spine) surgery were matched for age, sex, and comorbidities. A total of 259,443 ACDFs, 30,929 PCFs, and 29,563 decompressions were identified. Of these procedures, 1117 were performed on patients with PD (0.35%). The highest 90-day complications rates in patients with PD were pulmonary and gastrointestinal related (6.05%) in those who received ACDF, neuro related (8.51%) in those who received PCF, and genitourinary related (8.76%) in those who received a decompression. Compared with patients without PD, postoperative complications rates were similar and not significantly different. Patients with PD who receive ACDF have higher rates of pulmonary (6.05%), neurologic (5.24%), and psychiatric (3.23%) complications at 90 days. The differences did not reach statistical significance. This finding suggests that patients with PD do not experience higher rates of acute postoperative complications when undergoing 1-level cervical spine surgery.

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