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Predictors of Clinical Outcomes in Autologous Cranioplasty

Authors :
Saleh Safi
Arshad Ali
Ibrahim Abdelhafez
Abdul Salam
Talal Alrabayah
Abdulnasser Alyafei
Sirajeddin Belkhair
Source :
World Neurosurgery. 167:e561-e566
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Cranioplasty is a common neurosurgical procedure and autologous grafts are preferred due to their aesthetic and biocompatibility benefits. Multiple risk factors are implicated as predictors for neurologic outcome. This study focuses on risk factors that may be associated with complications and analyzes the predictors of neurologic outcomes after autologous cranioplasty.This is a retrospective observational study conducted at a tertiary care center between 2015 and 2021. Adults with autologous cranioplasty (n = 132) were recruited from procedure logs and the hospital electronic health record. Clinicodemographic parameters, risk factors, and complications were recorded. Neurologic outcomes were measured using the dichotomized Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS). Primary outcome measure was pre- and post-cranioplasty GOS at the last follow up. Secondary outcome measures were the predicting factors that contributed to enhanced neurologic outcome post-cranioplasty.Mean age was 41.4 (standard deviation ± 13.5) years with male predominance (12.2:1). Complications developed in 12.9% (n = 17), with infections in 3.8% (n = 5) and hydrocephalus in 2.3% (n = 3). In bivariate analysis, pre-cranioplasty GOS good grades 4 and 5 (P0.001), trauma as an indication for decompressive craniectomy (DC) (P0.001), and early cranioplasty ≤12 weeks (P = 0.023) were statistically significant predictors for post-cranioplasty neurologic recovery at follow-up. In a multiple logistic regression model, adjusted odds ratio for pre-cranioplasty GOS was 28.77 (95% confidence interval [CI] 7.21-114.74, P0.001), for trauma as indication for DC was 5.15 (95% CI 1.65-16.05, P = 0.003), and for early cranioplasty ≤12 weeks was 3.04 (95% CI 1.12-8.27 P = 0.029).Autologous cranioplasty contributes to a quantifiable neurologic outcome. Pre-cranioplasty neurologic status, cranioplasty done for traumatic DC and early cranioplasty may have potential for enhanced neurologic recovery. Further clinical studies with better evidence may expound upon these findings.

Subjects

Subjects :
Surgery
Neurology (clinical)

Details

ISSN :
18788750
Volume :
167
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
World Neurosurgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....45f84a17a3c9c8808a3e3bee02f44804
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wneu.2022.08.043