Michael Fields, Nathan J. Lee, Kyle McCormick, Paul J. Park, Venkat Boddapati, Meghan Cerpa, Jun S. Kim, Zeeshan M. Sardar, Lawrence G. Lenke


January 2022, pp 1 - 8 Original Article Read Full Article 10.1007/s00586-021-07089-4

First Online: 24 January 2022

Study design

Retrospective National Database Study.

Objective

Surgical intervention with spinal fusion is often indicated in cerebral palsy (CP) patients with progressive scoliosis. The purpose of this study was to utilize the National Readmission Database to determine the national estimates of complication rates, 90-day readmission rates, and costs associated with spinal fusion in adult patients with CP.

Methods

The 2012–2015 NRD databases were queried for all adult (age ≥ 19 years) patients diagnosed with CP (ICD-9: 333.71, 343.0-4, and 343.8-9) undergoing spinal fusion (ICD-9: 81.00-08).

Results

1166 adult patients with CP (42.7% female) underwent spinal fusion surgery between 2012 and 2015. 153 (13.1%) were readmitted within 90 days following the primary surgery, with a mean 33.8 ± 26.5 days. Mean hospital charge of the primary admission was $141,416 ± $157,359 and $167,081 ± $145,416 for the non-readmitted and readmitted patients, respectively (p = 0.06). The mean 90-day readmission charge was $72,479 ± $104,100. Most common complications with the primary admission included UTIs (no readmission vs. readmission: 7.6% vs. 4.8%; p = 0.18), respiratory (6.9% vs. 5.6%; p = 0.62), implant (3.8% vs. 6.0%; p = 0.21), and paralytic ileus (3.6% vs. 3.2%; p = 0.858). Multivariate analyses demonstrated the following as independent predictors for 90-day readmission: comorbid anemia (OR: 2.8; 95% CI: 1.6–4.9; p < 0.001), coagulopathy (2.9, 1.1–8.0, 0.037), perioperative blood transfusion (2.0, 1.1–3.8, 0.026), wound complication (6.4, 1.3–31.6, 0.023), and transfer to short-term hospital versus routine disposition (4.9, 1.0–23.3, 0.045).

Conclusion

Quality improvement efforts should be aimed at reducing rates of infection related complications as this was the most common reason for short-term complications and unplanned readmission following surgery.


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