Trends, Major Medical Complications, and Charges Associated With Surgery for Lumbar Spinal Stenosis in Older Adults
Oregon Health & Science University · University of Washington · +3 more institutions
Abstract
To examine trends in use of different types of stenosis operations and the association of complications and resource use with surgical complexity. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PATIENTS: Retrospective cohort analysis of Medicare claims for 2002-2007, focusing on 2007 to assess complications and resource use in US hospitals. Operations for Medicare recipients undergoing surgery for lumbar stenosis (n = 32,152 in the first 11 months of 2007) were grouped into 3 gradations of invasiveness: decompression alone, simple fusion (1 or 2 disk levels, single surgical approach), or complex fusion (more than 2 disk levels or combined anterior and posterior approach). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Rates of the 3 types of surgery, major complications, postoperative mortality, and resource use.
Overall, surgical rates declined slightly from 2002-2007, but the rate of complex fusion procedures increased 15-fold, from 1.3 to 19.9 per 100,000 beneficiaries. Life-threatening complications increased with increasing surgical invasiveness, from 2.3% among patients having decompression alone to 5.6% among those having complex fusions. After adjustment for age, comorbidity, previous spine surgery, and other features, the odds ratio (OR) of life-threatening complications for complex fusion compared with decompression alone was 2.95 (95% confidence interval [CI], 2.50-3.49). A similar pattern was observed for rehospitalization within 30 days, which occurred for 7.8% of patients undergoing decompression and 13.0% having a complex fusion (adjusted OR, 1.94; 95% CI, 1.74-2.17). Adjusted mean hospital charges for complex fusion procedures were US $80,888 compared with US $23,724 for decompression alone.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 44.99
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 43
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Lumbar spinal stenosis
- Comorbidity
- Decompression
- Odds ratio
- Spinal stenosis
- Surgery
- Lumbar