(Reuters Health) - Patients who
get spinal surgery at outpatient centers may be more likely to have
serious complications or require repeat operations than their
counterparts who get these procedures in a hospital, a U.S. study
suggests.
Researchers focused on an operation known as
anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF), which involves removing a
damaged disc in the neck to reduce pressure on the spinal cord or nerve
root that can cause pain, numbness and weakness. Most of these
surgeries are done in hospitals with a one or two night stay, but a
growing number of people are going instead to outpatient centers that
may have lower costs in part because they don’t keep patients overnight.
The study looked at outcomes for 1,215 patients who
had outpatient ACDF and 10,964 people who had these operations in a
hospital between 2011 and 2016.
Overall, there were few complications, researchers report in The Spine Journal.
One
year after surgery, 5.5 percent of the people who had outpatient
surgery needed repeat operations, as did 4.1 percent in the inpatient
group.
After accounting for individual patient
characteristics like age, gender and other health problems, the
researchers found that people who had outpatient ACDF were 79 percent
more likely to require repeat operations within one year than patients
who had operations in a hospital.
Outpatients were also 25 percent more likely to experience postoperative kidney failure.
“We
were surprised that the outpatient cohort had greater rates of
postoperative renal failure since these patients are typically younger
and healthier to undergo surgery in the outpatient setting,” said senior
study author Dr. Don Young Park of the David Geffen School of Medicine
at the University of California, Los Angeles.
“Our
study is the first to show that outpatient ACDF is associated with some
increased risk, even in ideal surgical candidates,” Park said by email.
All of the patients in the study had insurance through Humana.
In both the inpatient and outpatient groups, half of the patients were at least 65 to 69 years old.
The
study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether or how
the location of surgery might influence the outcomes.
Another
limitation of the study is that it relied on insurance claims data and
lacked detailed medical information on individual patients, the authors
note. Researchers also didn’t have data on early complications such as
emergency room visits or hospitalizations.
Individual
patient factors missing from the insurance claims data might explain the
slight differences in outcomes between inpatient and outpatient
operations, said Dr. Matthew McGirt of Carolina Neurosurgery & Spine
Associates in Charlotte, North Carolina, who wasn’t involved in the
study.
“There was no way to show the patient groups
were similar with regards to risk factors for failed fusion,” McGirt
said by email.
One factor that might have made a
difference is smoking status, noted Dr. John Ratliff, a researcher at
Stanford University Medical Center in California who wasn’t involved in
the study.
“Smoking cessation is important in
preventing post-operative complications,” Ratliff said by email.
“Unfortunately, this study does not assess smoking status.”
Still,
the findings add to the evidence that these operations can be done
safely, but should be considered only after other treatments such as
physical therapy, pain medication or steroid injections fail, doctors
say.
“Surgery should be reserved for patients with
severe pain despite an appropriate course of non-operative treatment or
for those with neurologic deficits,” said Dr. Frank Phillips, a
researcher at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago who wasn’t
involved in the study.
“In appropriately
selected patients, the success rate for ACDF procedure in terms of
improving symptoms is generally above 90 percent,” Phillips said by
email.
Part of that selection process should involve
considering which patients have the lowest complication risk and may be
the most appropriate candidates for outpatient operations, said Dr.
Daniel Refai, a researcher at Emory University in Atlanta who wasn’t
involved in the study.
“Insurance companies and
physician-owned ambulatory centers are driving patients to more
outpatient surgeries,” Refai said by email. “But without proper
selection, patients may be at increased risk with poorer outcomes.”
Source Link: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-spine-surgery/spine-surgery-may-be-safer-at-hospitals-than-outpatient-facilities-idUSKBN1EL1LV
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