Perioperative Complications and Health-related Quality of Life Outcomes in Severe Pediatric Spinal Deformity. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • STUDY DESIGN: Prospective multicenter cohort study. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate perioperative complications and mid-term outcomes for severe pediatric spinal deformity. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Few studies have evaluated the impact of complications on health-related quality of life (HRQoL) outcomes in severe pediatric spinal deformity. METHODS: Patients from a prospective, multicenter database with severe pediatric spinal deformity (minimum of 100 degree curve in any plane or planned vertebral column resection (VCR)) with a minimum of 2-years follow-up were evaluated (n=231). SRS-22r scores were collected preoperatively and at 2-years postoperatively. Complications were categorized as intraoperative, early postoperative (within 90-days of surgery), major, or minor. Perioperative complication rate was evaluated between patients with and without VCR. Additionally, SRS-22r scores were compared between patients with and without complications. RESULTS: Perioperative complications occurred in 135 (58%) patients, and major complications occurred in 53 (23%) patients. Patients that underwent VCR had a higher incidence of early postoperative complications than patients without VCR (28.9% vs. 16.2%, P =0.02). Complications resolved in 126/135 (93.3%) patients with a mean time to resolution of 91.63 days. Unresolved major complications included motor deficit (n=4), spinal cord deficit (n=1), nerve root deficit (n=1), compartment syndrome (n=1), and motor weakness due to recurrent intradural tumor (n=1). Patients with complications, major complications, or multiple complications had equivalent postoperative SRS-22r scores. Patients with motor deficits had lower postoperative satisfaction subscore (4.32 vs. 4.51, P =0.03), but patients with resolved motor deficits had equivalent postoperative scores in all domains. Patients with unresolved complications had lower postoperative satisfaction subscore (3.94 vs. 4.47, P =0.03) and less postoperative improvement in self-image subscore (0.64 vs. 1.42, P =0.03) as compared to patients with resolved complications. CONCLUSION: Most perioperative complications for severe pediatric spinal deformity resolve within 2-years postoperatively and do not result in adverse HRQoL outcomes. However, patients with unresolved complications have decreased HRQoL outcomes.

authors

  • Gupta, Munish
  • Lenke, Lawrence G
  • Gupta, Sachin
  • Farooqi, Ali S
  • Asghar, Jahangir K
  • Boachie-Adjei, Oheneba
  • Cahill, Patrick J
  • Erickson, Mark A
  • Garg, Sumeet
  • Newton, Peter O
  • Samdani, Amer F
  • Shah, Suken A
  • Shufflebarger, Harry L
  • Sponseller, Paul D
  • Sucato, Daniel J
  • Bumpass, David B
  • McCarthy, Richard E
  • Yaszay, Burt
  • Pahys, Joshua M
  • Ye, Jichao
  • Kelly, Michael P

publication date

  • April 27, 2023

Research

keywords

  • Quality of Life
  • Scoliosis

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85173583072

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1097/BRS.0000000000004696

PubMed ID

  • 37134134

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 48

issue

  • 21