Trends in the surgical treatment for metastatic spinal tumor in Japanese administrative data between 2012 and 2020.

Author:

Yamada Kentaro1,Yoshii Toshitaka1ORCID,Toba Mikayo2,Egawa Satoru1,Morishita Shingo1,Matsukura Yu1,Hirai Takashi1,Kudo Atsushi1,Fushimi Kiyohide1

Affiliation:

1. Tokyo Medical and Dental University: Tokyo Ika Shika Daigaku

2. Tokyo Medical and Dental University Hospital: Tokyo Ika Shika Daigaku Byoin

Abstract

Abstract Background. Both cancer diagnosis/treatment modality and surgical technique for the spine have been developed recently. Nationwide trends in the surgical treatment for metastatic spinal tumors have not been reported in the last decades. This study aimed to examine recent trends in the surgical treatment for spinal metastasis and in-hospital patient outcomes using nationwide administrative hospital discharge data. Methods. The Diagnosis Procedure Combination database from 2012 to 2020 was used to extract data from patients who underwent surgical procedures for spinal metastasis with the number of non-metastatic spinal surgery at the institutions that have performed metastatic spine surgeries at least one case in the same year. Trends in the surgical treatment for spinal metastasis, patients’ demographics, and in-hospital mortality/outcomes were investigated. Results. This study analyzed 10321 eligible patients with spinal metastasis. The surgical treatment for spinal metastasis increased 1.68 times from 2012 to 2020, especially in fusion surgery, whereas the proportion of metastatic spinal surgery retained with a slight increase in the 2%s. Distributions of the primary site did not change whereas age was getting older. In-hospital mortality and length of stay decreased over time (9.9–6.8%, p < 0.001; 37 days–30 days, p < 0.001). The postoperative complication and unfavorable ambulatory retained stable and slightly decreased, respectively. Conclusion. During the last decade, surgical treatment for spinal metastasis has increased in Japan. In-hospital mortality and length of stay decreased. The results of this study may provide useful information for healthcare policy or clinical research planning.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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