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- Keaton F Piper, Samuel B Tomlinson, Gabrielle Santangelo, Joseph Van Galen, Ian DeAndrea-Lazarus, James Towner, Kristopher T Kimmell, Howard Silberstein, and George Edward Vates.
- Department of Neurosurgery, University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, New York, United States.
- Surg Neurol Int. 2017 Jan 1; 8: 269.
BackgroundWound complications, including surgical site infections (SSIs) and wound dehiscence, are among the most common complications following spine surgery often leading to readmission. The authors sought to identify preoperative characteristics predictive of wound complications after spine surgery.MethodsThe American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program database for years 2012-2014 was reviewed for patients undergoing spine surgery, defined by the Current Procedural Terminology codes. Forty-four preoperative and surgical characteristics were analyzed for associations with wound complications.ResultsOf the 99,152 patients included in this study, 2.2% experienced at least one wound complication (superficial SSI: 0.9%, deep SSI: 0.8%, organ space SSI: 0.4%, and dehiscence: 0.3%). Multivariate binary logistic regression testing found 10 preoperative characteristics associated with wound complications: body mass index ≥30, smoker, female, chronic steroid use, hematocrit <38%, infected wound, inpatient status, emergency case, and operation time >3 hours. A risk score for each patient was created from the number of characteristics present. Receiver operating characteristic curves of the unweighted and weighted risk scores generated areas under the curve of 0.701 (95% CI: 0.690-0.713) and 0.715 (95% CI: 0.704-0.726), respectively. Patients with unweighted risk scores >7 were 25-fold more likely to develop a wound complication compared to patients with scores of 0. In addition, mortality rate, reoperation rate, and total length of stay each increased nearly 10-fold with increasing risk score.ConclusionThis study introduces a novel risk score for the development of wound dehiscence and SSIs in patients undergoing spine surgery, using new risk factors identified here.
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