Highest Achievable Outcomes for Adult Spinal Deformity Corrective Surgery: Does Frailty Severity Exert a Ceiling Effect?
Date
2024-09
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Abstract
Study design
Retrospective single-center study.Objective
To assess the influence of frailty on optimal outcome following ASD corrective surgery.Summary of background data
Frailty is a determining factor in outcomes after ASD surgery and may exert a ceiling effect on the best possible outcome.Methods
ASD patients with frailty measures, baseline, and 2-year ODI included. Frailty was classified as Not Frail (NF), Frail (F) and Severely Frail (SF) based on the modified Frailty Index, then stratified into quartiles based on two-year ODI improvement (most improved designated "Highest"). Logistic regression analyzed relationships between frailty and ODI score and improvement, maintenance, or deterioration. A Kaplan-Meier survival curve was used to analyze differences in time to complication or reoperation.Results
A total of 393 ASD patients were isolated (55.2% NF, 31.0% F, and 13.7% SF), then classified as 12.5% NF-Highest, 17.8% F-Highest, and 3.1% SF-Highest. The SF group had the highest rate of deterioration (16.7%, P =0.025) in the second postoperative year, but the groups were similar in improvement (NF: 10.1%, F: 11.5%, SF: 9.3%, P =0.886). Improvement of SF patients was greatest at six months (ΔODI of -22.6±18.0, P <0.001), but NF and F patients reached maximal ODI at 2 years (ΔODI of -15.7±17.9 and -20.5±18.4, respectively). SF patients initially showed the greatest improvement in ODI (NF: -4.8±19.0, F: -12.4±19.3, SF: -22.6±18.0 at six months, P <0.001). A Kaplan-Meier survival curve showed a trend of less time to major complication or reoperation by 2 years with increasing frailty (NF: 7.5±0.381 yr, F: 6.7±0.511 yr, SF: 5.8±0.757 yr; P =0.113).Conclusions
Increasing frailty had a negative effect on maximal improvement, where severely frail patients exhibited a parabolic effect with greater initial improvement due to higher baseline disability, but reached a ceiling effect with less overall maximal improvement. Severe frailty may exert a ceiling effect on improvement and impair maintenance of improvement following surgery.Level of evidence
Level III.Type
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Publication Info
Passias, Peter G, Oluwatobi O Onafowokan, Peter Tretiakov, Tyler Williamson, Nicholas Kummer, Jamshaid Mir, Ankita Das, Oscar Krol, et al. (2024). Highest Achievable Outcomes for Adult Spinal Deformity Corrective Surgery: Does Frailty Severity Exert a Ceiling Effect?. Spine, 49(18). pp. 1269–1274. 10.1097/brs.0000000000004981 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/31730.
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Peter Passias
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