Frequency and predictors of complication clustering within 30 days of spinal fusion surgery: a study of children with neuromuscular scoliosis
Pediatric
Male
Time Factors
Adolescent
National Surgical Quality Improvement Program
Operative Time
610
Neuromuscular Diseases
Pneumonia
618
Spinal deformity
Spinal Fusion
Postoperative Complications
Scoliosis
Risk Factors
Co-occurrence
Humans
Neuromuscular scoliosis
Case Series
Female
Fusion
Child
Complication
Retrospective Studies
DOI:
10.1007/s43390-023-00813-8
Publication Date:
2024-02-09T14:03:29Z
AUTHORS (12)
ABSTRACT
Abstract
Purpose
There is limited information on the clustering or co-occurrence of complications after spinal fusion surgery for neuromuscular disease in children. We aimed to identify the frequency and predictive factors of co-occurring perioperative complications in these children.
Methods
In this retrospective database cohort study, we identified children (ages 10–18 years) with neuromuscular scoliosis who underwent elective spinal fusion in 2012–2020 from the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program-Pediatric database. The rates of co-occurring complications within 30 days were calculated, and associated factors were identified by logistic regression analysis. Correlation between a number of complications and outcomes was assessed.
Results
Approximately 11% (709/6677 children with neuromuscular scoliosis undergoing spinal fusion had co-occurring complications: 7% experienced two complications and 4% experienced ≥ 3. The most common complication was bleeding/transfusion (80%), which most frequently co-occurred with pneumonia (24%) and reintubation (18%). Surgical time ≥ 400 min (odds ratio (OR) 1.49 [95% confidence interval (CI) 1.25–1.75]), fusion ≥ 13 levels (1.42 [1.13–1.79]), and pelvic fixation (OR 1.21 [1.01, 1.44]) were identified as procedural factors that independently predicted concurrent complications. Clinical risk factors for co-occurring complications included an American Society of Anesthesiologist physical status classification ≥ 3 (1.73 [1.27–2.37]), structural pulmonary/airway abnormalities (1.24 [1.01–1.52]), impaired cognitive status (1.80 [1.41–2.30]), seizure disorder (1.36 [1.12–1.67]), hematologic disorder (1.40 [1.03–1.91], preoperative nutritional support (1.34 [1.08–1.72]), and congenital malformations (1.20 [1.01–1.44]). Preoperative tracheostomy was protective against concurrent complications (0.62 [0.43–0.89]). Significant correlations were found between number of complications and length of stay, non-home discharge, readmissions, and death.
Conclusion
Longer surgical time (≥ 400 min), fusion ≥ 13 levels and pelvic fixation are surgical risk factors independently associated with co-occurring complications, which were associated with poorer patient outcomes. Recognizing identified nonmodifiable risk factors might also be important for preoperative planning and risk stratification of children with neuromuscular scoliosis requiring spinal fusion.
Level of evidence
Level IV evidence.
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