1. Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) for open transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion: a retrospective propensity-matched cohort study
- Author
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Adam J. Polifka, Christoph N. Seubert, Kaitlyn Melnick, Ronny Samra, Ken Porche, Sasha Vaziri, Meghan Brennan, Daniel J. Hoh, and Basma Mohamed
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Lumbar Vertebrae ,business.industry ,Multimodal therapy ,Perioperative ,Article ,Surgery ,Cohort Studies ,Spinal Fusion ,Treatment Outcome ,Cohort ,Propensity score matching ,medicine ,Humans ,Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures ,Defecation ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Fast track ,Enhanced Recovery After Surgery ,Complication ,business ,Body mass index ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) protocol is a multidisciplinary, multimodal approach which has been shown to facilitate recovery of physiological function, and reduce postoperative pain, complication rates, and length of stay without adversely affecting readmission rates. Design and implementation of ERAS protocols in the recent spine surgery literature has primarily focused on patients undergoing minimally invasive lumbar surgery. However, conventional open transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion (TLIF) remains a common procedure and to date there are no studies assessing an ERAS protocol in this patient population. PURPOSE: This study presents a single surgeon experience implementing an ERAS protocol in patients undergoing 1- or 2-level open TLIF. STUDY DESIGN/SETTING: Retrospective consecutive patient cohort with controls propensity-matched for age, body mass index, sex, and smoking status. PATIENT SAMPLE: Consecutive patients that underwent 1- or 2-level open TLIF for degenerative disease from 12/2018 – 02/2021 and controls from 12/2011–12/2017 by a single surgeon. ERAS was implemented in December 2018. OUTCOME MEASURES: Primary: length of stay; Secondary: first day to ambulate, first day to bowel movement, first day to void, daily average and maximum pain scores, opioid use, discharge disposition, 30-day readmission rate, and re-operations. METHODS: Demographic, perioperative, clinical, radiographic data were collected. Multivariate mixed-linear regression models were developed for length of stay, physiological function, pain scales, and opiate use. RESULTS: There were 114 patients included with 57 in each cohort. After propensity matching, patient characteristics were similar between groups. Operative time decreased significantly after institution of ERAS (170±44 vs. 141±37 minutes, p
- Published
- 2022
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