Scoliosis research society morbidity and mortality of adult scoliosis surgery.

dc.contributor.author

Sansur, Charles A

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Smith, Justin S

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Coe, Jeff D

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Glassman, Steven D

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Berven, Sigurd H

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Polly, David W

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Perra, Joseph H

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Boachie-Adjei, Oheneba

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Shaffrey, Christopher I

dc.date.accessioned

2023-10-11T18:34:08Z

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2023-10-11T18:34:08Z

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2011-04

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2023-10-11T18:34:07Z

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Study design

A retrospective review.

Objective

To obtain an assessment of complication incidence using the largest known database of adult scoliosis and to determine whether the rate of complication depends on various clinical parameters.

Summary of background data

The Scoliosis Research Society (SRS) morbidity and mortality database has previously been used to assess complication rates in adolescents undergoing scoliosis correction. To better understand complications in adults, degenerative and idiopathic adult scoliosis (AS) cases were studied.

Methods

The SRS morbidity and mortality database was queried to identify cases of AS from 2004 to 2007. Complications were identified and analyzed on the basis of patient type of scoliosis (degenerative vs. adult idiopathic), age, use of osteotomy, revision surgery status, and surgical approach. Age was stratified into less than or equal to 60 and greater than 60. Surgical approach was stratified into anterior only, posterior only, and combined anterior/posterior.

Results

A total of 4980 cases of AS were submitted from 2004 to 2007. There were 521 patients with complications (10.5%), and a total of 669 complications (13.4%). The most common complications were dural tear 142 (2.9%), superficial wound infection 46 (0.9%), deep wound infection 73 (1.5%), implant complication 80 (1.6%), acute neurological deficits 49 (1.0%), delayed neurological deficits 41 (0.5%), epidural hematoma 12 (0.2%), wound hematoma 22 (0.4%), pulmonary embolus 12 (0.2%), and deep venous thrombosis 9 (0.2%). There were 17 deaths (0.3%). There were 2555 patients with degenerative and 2425 patients with adult idiopathic scoliosis. Complication rates in these two groups were not significantly different (11.0% and 9.9%, respectively, P = 0.20). Age was not associated with complication rate (P = 0.32). Significantly higher complication rates were identified in osteotomies, revision surgery, and/or combined anterior-posterior surgery (P = 0.0006, 0.006, and 0.03, respectively).

Conclusions

The overall complication rate for AS treatment is 13.4%. Complication rate is significantly higher when osteotomies, revision procedures, and combined anterior/posterior approaches are used. Complication rate is not influenced by scoliosis type or age.
dc.identifier.issn

0362-2436

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1528-1159

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/29244

dc.language

eng

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Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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Spine

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10.1097/brs.0b013e3182059bfd

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Humans

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Scoliosis

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Postoperative Complications

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Treatment Outcome

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Orthopedic Procedures

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Morbidity

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Survival Rate

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Retrospective Studies

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Databases, Factual

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Adult

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Middle Aged

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Societies, Medical

dc.title

Scoliosis research society morbidity and mortality of adult scoliosis surgery.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Shaffrey, Christopher I|0000-0001-9760-8386

pubs.begin-page

E593

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E597

pubs.issue

9

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Duke

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School of Medicine

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Clinical Science Departments

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Orthopaedic Surgery

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Neurosurgery

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

36

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