1. Hospital-acquired conditions occur more frequently in elective spine surgery than for other common elective surgical procedures
- Author
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Samantha R. Horn, Nicholas J. Frangella, Hamid Hassanzadeh, Nicholas Shepard, Haddy Alas, Cheongeun Oh, Brendan Jackson-Fowl, Avery E. Brown, John Y. Moon, Frank A. Segreto, Bassel G. Diebo, Peter G. Passias, Katherine E. Pierce, Virginie Lafage, Jason A. Horowitz, Nicholas Stekas, Shaleen Vira, Renaud Lafage, Max Egers, John A. Bendo, Rafael De la Garza Ramos, Cole Bortz, Breton Line, and Dennis Vasquez-Montes
- Subjects
Male ,musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Databases, Factual ,Iatrogenic Disease ,MEDLINE ,Comorbidity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Patient safety ,0302 clinical medicine ,Spine surgery ,Physiology (medical) ,Humans ,Medicine ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Surgical procedures ,medicine.disease ,Spine ,United States ,Neurology ,Elective Surgical Procedures ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Elective Surgical Procedure ,Medicaid ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Hospital-acquired conditions (HACs) have been the focus of recent initiatives by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services in an effort to improve patient safety and outcomes. Spine surgery can be complex and may carry significant comorbidity burden, including so called "never events." The objective was to determine the rates of common HACs that occur within 30-days post-operatively for elective spine surgeries and compare them to other common surgical procedures. Patients:18 y/o undergoing elective spine surgery were identified in the American College of Surgeons' NSQIP database from 2005 to 2013. Patients were stratified by whether they experienced1 HAC, then compared to those undergoing other procedures including bariatric surgery, THA and TKA. Of the 90,551 spine surgery patients, 3021 (3.3%) developed at least one HAC. SSI was the most common (1.4%), followed by UTI (1.3%), and VTE (0.8%). Rates of HACs in spine surgery were significantly higher than other elective procedures including bariatric surgery (2.8%) and THA (2.8%) (both p 0.001). Spine surgery and TKA patients had similar rates of HACs(3.3% vs 3.4%, p = 0.287), though spine patients experienced higher rates of SSI (1.4%vs0.8%, p 0.001) and UTI (1.3%vs1.1%, p 0.001) but lower rates of VTE (0.8%vs1.6%, p 0.001). Spine surgery patients had lower rates of HACs overall (3.3%vs5.9%) when compared to cardiothoracic surgery patients (p 0.001). When compared to other surgery types, spine procedures were associated with higher HACs than bariatric surgery patients and knee and hip arthroplasties overall but lower HAC rates than patients undergoing cardiothoracic surgery.
- Published
- 2020