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Complication Events After Spinal Surgery Performed by American Board of Orthopaedic Surgery (ABOS) Part II Candidates (2008-2017)

机译:美国矫形外科(ABOS)第二部分候选人(2008-2017)进行脊柱手术后的并发症事件

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Study Design. Retrospective cohort study. Objective. To evaluate complications following spine surgery using American Board of Orthopaedic Surgeons (ABOS) Part II examination data from 2008 to 2017. Summary of Background Data. Recent research has demonstrated the importance of surgical experience and clinical volume in minimizing complications after spine surgery. This may be challenging for orthopedic spine surgeons who are just starting their practice. Methods. We performed a retrospective review of surgical cases submitted to the ABOS by candidates taking the Part II Spine examination between 2008 and 2017. Complications, including peri-operative mortality as reported by candidates to the ABOS, were tracked over time. Complications were classified as surgical or medical using a predefined algorithm. Multivariable Poisson regression analyses adjusting for confounders were used to assess rates of complications and mortality over time. All analyses controlled for biologic sex, age, surgical diagnosis, and surgical location. Results. A total of 37,539 spine surgical patients were analyzed, with an average of 3754 cases performed each year. Following adjusted Poisson analysis, we determined that cases in 2017 had an increased likelihood of complications when compared to those treated in 2008 (IRR 1.20; 95% CI 1.09, 1.32). Similar findings were encountered for surgical complications (IRR 1.20; 95% CI 1.07, 1.34). In contrast, spine surgical cases reported to the ABOS in 2017 had a 55% lower likelihood of mortality when compared to procedures performed in 2008 (IRR 0.45; 95% CI 0.24, 0.84; P = 0.01). Conclusions. Our analysis of ABOS Part II candidates demonstrates that reported complication rates may be increasing while mortality is decreasing. The etiologies behind these findings are likely multifactorial. Encouragingly, we believe that observed reductions in mortality suggest overall improvements in patient safety following spine surgery. At a minimum, our data provide benchmarks through which spine surgeons, hospitals, and residency or fellowship programs can evaluate performance.
机译:研究设计。回顾性队列研究。客观的利用2008年至2017年美国矫形外科医师委员会(ABOS)第二部分检查数据评估脊柱手术后的并发症。背景数据摘要。最近的研究已经证明了手术经验和临床容量对于减少脊柱手术后并发症的重要性。对于刚刚开始实践的脊柱矫形外科医生来说,这可能是一个挑战。方法。我们对2008年至2017年间参加第二部分脊柱检查的候选人提交给ABOS的外科病例进行了回顾性审查。患者向ABOS报告的并发症,包括围手术期死亡率,均随时间进行跟踪。使用预定义的算法将并发症分为外科或内科。采用多变量泊松回归分析,调整混杂因素,以评估随时间推移的并发症和死亡率。所有分析均以生物性别、年龄、手术诊断和手术部位为对照。后果共分析了37539例脊柱外科患者,平均每年执行3754例。经过调整后的泊松分析,我们确定,与2008年治疗的病例相比,2017年的病例发生并发症的可能性增加(IRR 1.20;95%可信区间1.09,1.32)。手术并发症也有类似的发现(IRR 1.20;95%可信区间1.07,1.34)。相比之下,2017年向ABOS报告的脊柱手术病例与2008年进行的手术相比,死亡率降低55%(IRR 0.45;95%可信区间0.24,0.84;P=0.01)。结论。我们对ABOS第二部分候选者的分析表明,报告的并发症发生率可能在增加,而死亡率在下降。这些发现背后的病因可能是多因素的。令人鼓舞的是,我们认为,观察到的死亡率下降表明脊柱手术后患者安全性的总体改善。至少,我们的数据提供了脊柱外科医生、医院、住院医师或奖学金项目评估绩效的基准。

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