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Is Blood Loss Greater in Elderly Patients under Antiplatelet or Anticoagulant Medication for Cervical Spine Injury Surgery? A Japanese Multicenter Survey

Authors :
Masashi Uehara
Shota Ikegami
Takashi Takizawa
Hiroki Oba
Noriaki Yokogawa
Takeshi Sasagawa
Kei Ando
Hiroaki Nakashima
Naoki Segi
Toru Funayama
Fumihiko Eto
Akihiro Yamaji
Kota Watanabe
Satoshi Nori
Kazuki Takeda
Takeo Furuya
Sumihisa Orita
Hideaki Nakajima
Tomohiro Yamada
Tomohiko Hasegawa
Yoshinori Terashima
Ryosuke Hirota
Hidenori Suzuki
Yasuaki Imajo
Hitoshi Tonomura
Munehiro Sakata
Ko Hashimoto
Yoshito Onoda
Kenichi Kawaguchi
Yohei Haruta
Nobuyuki Suzuki
Kenji Kato
Hiroshi Uei
Hirokatsu Sawada
Kazuo Nakanishi
Kosuke Misaki
Hidetomi Terai
Koji Tamai
Eiki Shirasawa
Gen Inoue
Kenichiro Kakutani
Yuji Kakiuchi
Katsuhito Kiyasu
Hiroyuki Tominaga
Hiroto Tokumoto
Yoichi Iizuka
Eiji Takasawa
Koji Akeda
Norihiko Takegami
Haruki Funao
Yasushi Oshima
Takashi Kaito
Daisuke Sakai
Toshitaka Yoshii
Tetsuro Ohba
Bungo Otsuki
Shoji Seki
Masashi Miyazaki
Masayuki Ishihara
Seiji Okada
Yasuchika Aoki
Katsumi Harimaya
Hideki Murakami
Ken Ishii
Seiji Ohtori
Shiro Imagama
Satoshi Kato
Source :
Spine Surgery and Related Research, Vol 6, Iss 4, Pp 366-372 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
The Japanese Society for Spine Surgery and Related Research, 2022.

Abstract

Introduction: In elderly patients with cervical spinal cord injury, comorbidities such as cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases are common, with frequent administration of antiplatelet/anticoagulant (APAC) drugs. Such patients may bleed easily or unexpectedly during surgery despite prior withdrawal of APAC medication. Few reports have examined the precise relationship between intraoperative blood loss and history of APAC use regarding surgery for cervical spine injury in the elderly. The present multicenter database survey aimed to answer the question of whether the use of APAC drugs affected the amount of intraoperative blood loss in elderly patients with cervical spinal cord trauma. Methods: The case histories of 1512 patients with cervical spine injury at 33 institutes were retrospectively reviewed. After excluding cases without spinal surgery or known blood loss volume, 797 patients were enrolled. Blood volume loss was the outcome of interest. We calculated propensity scores using the inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW) method. As an alternative sensitivity analysis, linear mixed model analyses were conducted as well. Results: Of the 776 patients (mean age: 75.1±6.4 years) eligible for IPTW calculation, 157 (20.2%) were taking APAC medications before the injury. After weighting, mean estimated blood loss was 204 mL for non-APAC patients and 215 mL for APAC patients. APAC use in elderly patients was not significantly associated with surgical blood loss according to the IPTW method with propensity scoring or linear mixed model analyses. Thus, it appeared possible to perform surgery expecting comparable blood loss in APAC and non-APAC cases. Conclusions: This multicenter study revealed no significant increase in surgical blood loss in elderly patients with cervical trauma taking APAC drugs. Surgeons may be able to prioritize patient background, complications, and preexisting conditions over APAC use before injury when examining the surgical indications for cervical spine trauma in the elderly.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2432261X and 20210183
Volume :
6
Issue :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Spine Surgery and Related Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.1c45366aef942fbb68fc035bcc9d84e
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.22603/ssrr.2021-0183