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Predictive Analytics for Determining Extended Operative Time in Corrective Adult Spinal Deformity Surgery.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Passias, PG; Poorman, GW; Vasquez-Montes, D; Kummer, N; Mundis, G; Anand, N; Horn, SR; Segreto, FA; Passfall, L; Krol, O; Diebo, B; Burton, D ...
Published in: Int J Spine Surg
April 2022

BACKGROUND: More sophisticated surgical techniques for correcting adult spinal deformity (ASD) have increased operative times, adding to physiologic stress on patients and increased complication incidence. This study aims to determine factors associated with operative time using a statistical learning algorithm. METHODS: Retrospective review of a prospective multicenter database containing 837 patients undergoing long spinal fusions for ASD. Conditional inference decision trees identified factors associated with skin-to-skin operative time and cutoff points at which factors have a global effect. A conditional variable-importance table was constructed based on a nonreplacement sampling set of 2000 conditional inference trees. Means comparison for the top 15 variables at their respective significant cutoffs indicated effect sizes. RESULTS: Included: 544 surgical ASD patients (mean age: 58.0 years; fusion length 11.3 levels; operative time: 378 minutes). The strongest predictor for operative time was institution/surgeon. Center/surgeons, grouped by decision tree hierarchy, a and b were, on average, 2 hours faster than center/surgeons c-f, who were 43 minutes faster than centers g-j, all P < 0.001. The next most important predictors were, in order, approach (combined vs posterior increases time by 139 minutes, P < 0.001), levels fused (<4 vs 5-9 increased time by 68 minutes, P < 0.050; 5-9 vs < 10 increased time by 47 minutes, P < 0.001), age (age <50 years increases time by 57 minutes, P < 0.001), and patient frailty (score <1.54 increases time by 65 minutes, P < 0.001). Surgical techniques, such as three-column osteotomies (35 minutes), interbody device (45 minutes), and decompression (48 minutes), also increased operative time. Both minor and major complications correlated with <66 minutes of increased operative time. Increased operative time also correlated with increased hospital length of stay (LOS), increased estimated intraoperative blood loss (EBL), and inferior 2-year Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) scores. CONCLUSIONS: Procedure location and specific surgeon are the most important factors determining operative time, accounting for operative time increases <2 hours. Surgical approach and number of levels fused were also associated with longer operative times, respectively. Extended operative time correlated with longer LOS, higher EBL, and inferior 2-y ODI outcomes. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: We further identified the poor outcomes associated with extended operative time during surgical correction of ASD, and attributed the useful predictors of time spent in the operating room, including site, surgeon, surgical approach, and the number of levels fused.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Int J Spine Surg

DOI

ISSN

2211-4599

Publication Date

April 2022

Volume

16

Issue

2

Start / End Page

291 / 299

Location

Netherlands

Related Subject Headings

  • 3202 Clinical sciences
  • 1109 Neurosciences
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Passias, P. G., Poorman, G. W., Vasquez-Montes, D., Kummer, N., Mundis, G., Anand, N., … International Spine Study Group, . (2022). Predictive Analytics for Determining Extended Operative Time in Corrective Adult Spinal Deformity Surgery. Int J Spine Surg, 16(2), 291–299. https://doi.org/10.14444/8174
Passias, Peter G., Gregory W. Poorman, Dennis Vasquez-Montes, Nicholas Kummer, Gregory Mundis, Neel Anand, Samantha R. Horn, et al. “Predictive Analytics for Determining Extended Operative Time in Corrective Adult Spinal Deformity Surgery.Int J Spine Surg 16, no. 2 (April 2022): 291–99. https://doi.org/10.14444/8174.
Passias PG, Poorman GW, Vasquez-Montes D, Kummer N, Mundis G, Anand N, et al. Predictive Analytics for Determining Extended Operative Time in Corrective Adult Spinal Deformity Surgery. Int J Spine Surg. 2022 Apr;16(2):291–9.
Passias, Peter G., et al. “Predictive Analytics for Determining Extended Operative Time in Corrective Adult Spinal Deformity Surgery.Int J Spine Surg, vol. 16, no. 2, Apr. 2022, pp. 291–99. Pubmed, doi:10.14444/8174.
Passias PG, Poorman GW, Vasquez-Montes D, Kummer N, Mundis G, Anand N, Horn SR, Segreto FA, Passfall L, Krol O, Diebo B, Burton D, Buckland A, Gerling M, Soroceanu A, Eastlack R, Kojo Hamilton D, Hart R, Schwab F, Lafage V, Shaffrey C, Sciubba D, Bess S, Ames C, Klineberg E, International Spine Study Group. Predictive Analytics for Determining Extended Operative Time in Corrective Adult Spinal Deformity Surgery. Int J Spine Surg. 2022 Apr;16(2):291–299.
Journal cover image

Published In

Int J Spine Surg

DOI

ISSN

2211-4599

Publication Date

April 2022

Volume

16

Issue

2

Start / End Page

291 / 299

Location

Netherlands

Related Subject Headings

  • 3202 Clinical sciences
  • 1109 Neurosciences