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Development and validation of risk stratification models for adult spinal deformity surgery.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Pellisé, F; Serra-Burriel, M; Smith, JS; Haddad, S; Kelly, MP; Vila-Casademunt, A; Sánchez Pérez-Grueso, FJ; Bess, S; Gum, JL; Burton, DC ...
Published in: J Neurosurg Spine
June 28, 2019

OBJECTIVE: Adult spinal deformity (ASD) surgery has a high rate of major complications (MCs). Public information about adverse outcomes is currently limited to registry average estimates. The object of this study was to assess the incidence of adverse events after ASD surgery, and to develop and validate a prognostic tool for the time-to-event risk of MC, hospital readmission (RA), and unplanned reoperation (RO). METHODS: Two models per outcome, created with a random survival forest algorithm, were trained in an 80% random split and tested in the remaining 20%. Two independent prospective multicenter ASD databases, originating from the European continent and the United States, were queried, merged, and analyzed. ASD patients surgically treated by 57 surgeons at 23 sites in 5 countries in the period from 2008 to 2016 were included in the analysis. RESULTS: The final sample consisted of 1612 ASD patients: mean (standard deviation) age 56.7 (17.4) years, 76.6% women, 10.4 (4.3) fused vertebral levels, 55.1% of patients with pelvic fixation, 2047.9 observation-years. Kaplan-Meier estimates showed that 12.1% of patients had at least one MC at 10 days after surgery; 21.5%, at 90 days; and 36%, at 2 years. Discrimination, measured as the concordance statistic, was up to 71.7% (95% CI 68%-75%) in the development sample for the postoperative complications model. Surgical invasiveness, age, magnitude of deformity, and frailty were the strongest predictors of MCs. Individual cumulative risk estimates at 2 years ranged from 3.9% to 74.1% for MCs, from 3.17% to 44.2% for RAs, and from 2.67% to 51.9% for ROs. CONCLUSIONS: The creation of accurate prognostic models for the occurrence and timing of MCs, RAs, and ROs following ASD surgery is possible. The presented variability in patient risk profiles alongside the discrimination and calibration of the models highlights the potential benefits of obtaining time-to-event risk estimates for patients and clinicians.

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Published In

J Neurosurg Spine

DOI

EISSN

1547-5646

Publication Date

June 28, 2019

Start / End Page

1 / 13

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Orthopedics
  • 3209 Neurosciences
  • 1109 Neurosciences
  • 1103 Clinical Sciences
 

Citation

APA
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MLA
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Pellisé, F., Serra-Burriel, M., Smith, J. S., Haddad, S., Kelly, M. P., Vila-Casademunt, A., … European Spine Study Group, . (2019). Development and validation of risk stratification models for adult spinal deformity surgery. J Neurosurg Spine, 1–13. https://doi.org/10.3171/2019.3.SPINE181452
Pellisé, Ferran, Miquel Serra-Burriel, Justin S. Smith, Sleiman Haddad, Michael P. Kelly, Alba Vila-Casademunt, Francisco Javier Sánchez Pérez-Grueso, et al. “Development and validation of risk stratification models for adult spinal deformity surgery.J Neurosurg Spine, June 28, 2019, 1–13. https://doi.org/10.3171/2019.3.SPINE181452.
Pellisé F, Serra-Burriel M, Smith JS, Haddad S, Kelly MP, Vila-Casademunt A, et al. Development and validation of risk stratification models for adult spinal deformity surgery. J Neurosurg Spine. 2019 Jun 28;1–13.
Pellisé, Ferran, et al. “Development and validation of risk stratification models for adult spinal deformity surgery.J Neurosurg Spine, June 2019, pp. 1–13. Pubmed, doi:10.3171/2019.3.SPINE181452.
Pellisé F, Serra-Burriel M, Smith JS, Haddad S, Kelly MP, Vila-Casademunt A, Sánchez Pérez-Grueso FJ, Bess S, Gum JL, Burton DC, Acaroğlu E, Kleinstück F, Lafage V, Obeid I, Schwab F, Shaffrey CI, Alanay A, Ames C, International Spine Study Group, European Spine Study Group. Development and validation of risk stratification models for adult spinal deformity surgery. J Neurosurg Spine. 2019 Jun 28;1–13.

Published In

J Neurosurg Spine

DOI

EISSN

1547-5646

Publication Date

June 28, 2019

Start / End Page

1 / 13

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Orthopedics
  • 3209 Neurosciences
  • 1109 Neurosciences
  • 1103 Clinical Sciences