Highest Achievable Outcomes for Adult Spinal Deformity Corrective Surgery

Author:

Passias Peter G.1,Onafowokan Oluwatobi O.1,Tretiakov Peter1,Williamson Tyler1,Kummer Nicholas1,Mir Jamshaid1,Das Ankita1,Krol Oscar1,Passfall Lara1,Joujon-Roche Rachel1,Imbo Bailey1,Yee Timothy2,Sciubba Daniel3,Paulino Carl B.4,Schoenfeld Andrew J.5,Smith Justin S.6,Lafage Renaud7,Lafage Virginie7

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Orthopaedic and Neurosurgery, Division of Spinal Surgery/NYU Langone Medical Center, New York Spine Institute, New York, NY

2. Department of Neurosurgery, University of California San Francisco, CA

3. Department of Neurosurgery, Northwell Health, New York, NY

4. Department of Orthopedic Surgery, SUNY Downstate-University Hospital of Brooklyn, New York, NY

5. Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Brigham and Women’s Center for Surgery and Public Health, Boston, MA

6. Department of Neurosurgery, University of Virginia Medical Center, Charlottesville, VA

7. Department of Orthopaedics, Lenox Hill Hospital, Northwell Health, New York, NY

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.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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