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Planned two-stage surgery using lateral lumbar interbody fusion and posterior corrective fusion: a retrospective study of perioperative complications

Authors :
Yukihiro Matsuyama
Tomohiko Hasegawa
Yuh Watanabe
Yu Yamato
Hideyuki Arima
Yuki Mihara
Tomohiro Yamada
Tomohiro Banno
Go Yoshida
Hiroki Ushirozako
Tatsuya Yasuda
Shin Oe
Koichiro Ide
Source :
European Spine Journal. 30:2368-2376
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Purpose: To determine the effect of planned two-stage surgery using lateral lumbar interbody fusion (LLIF) on the perioperative complication rate following corrective fusion surgery in patients with kyphoscoliosis.Methods: Consecutive patients with degenerative scoliosis who underwent corrective fusion were divided into a control group that underwent single-stage posterior-only surgery and a group that underwent planned two-staged surgery with LLIF and posterior corrective fusion. We collected the patient background and surgical data and assessed the perioperative complication rates. We also investigated spinopelvic parameters and patient-reported outcome measurements (PROMs).Results: One hundred and thirty-eight patients of mean age 69.8 (range, 50–84) years who met the study inclusion criteria were included. The two-stage group (n=75) underwent a staged anterior-posterior surgical procedure and the control group (n=63) underwent single-stage surgery. There was no significant between-group difference in the incidence of perioperative complications, except for deep wound infection (reoperation is necessary for surgical site infection). Revision surgery within 3 months of the initial surgery was more common in the control group (n=8, 12.7%) than in the two-stage group (n=3, 4.0%). Spinopelvic parameters and PROMs were significantly better in the two-stage group at 2 years postoperatively.Conclusion: The complication rate for planned two-stage surgery was similar to that of previous posterior-only single-stage surgery. However, early reoperation was less common, and the degree of spinal correction and clinical results were significantly better after two-stage surgery.

Details

ISSN :
14320932 and 09406719
Volume :
30
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Spine Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f51702876f3624a06c3facec413e43fa
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00586-021-06879-0