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Enhanced recovery pathway in adult patients undergoing thoracolumbar deformity surgery
Authors:Han Jo Kim  Michael Steinhaus  Ananth Punyala  Sachin Shah  Jonathan Charles Elysee  Renaud Lafage  Tom Riviera  Guillermo Mendez  Ajiri Ojadi  Sharlynn Tuohy  Sheeraz Qureshi  Michael Urban  Chad Craig  Virginie Lafage  Francis Lovecchio
Institution:1. Hospital for Special Surgery, Spine Service, 535 East 70th St., New York, NY 10021, USA;2. Hospital for Special Surgery, Department of Nursing, 535 East 70th St., New York, NY 10021, USA;3. Hospital for Special Surgery, Department of Physical Therapy, 535 East 70th St., New York, NY 10021, USA;4. Hospital for Special Surgery, Department of Anesthesiology, 535 East 70th St., New York, NY 10021, USA;1. Division of Orthopaedics, Department of Surgery, Western University /London Health Sciences Centre, London, Ontario, Canada;2. Department of Orthopeadic Surgery, Spine Division, Vancouver General Hospital/University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada;3. Department of Surgery, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada;4. Lawson Health Research Institute /London Health Sciences Centre, E4-120, 800 Commissioners Road, East, London, Ontario N6A 4G5, Canada;5. Department of Surgery, Canada East Spine Centre, Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada;6. Department of Surgery, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada;7. Department of Surgery, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada;1. Division of Neurosurgery, AOU Sant''Andrea, Department of NESMOS, Sapienza University, Rome, Italy;2. Department of Medical and Surgical Sciences and Biotechnologies, Sapienza, University of Rome, Italy
Abstract:BACKGROUND CONTEXTEnhanced recovery (ERAS) pathways can help hospitals maximize the incentives of bundled payment models while maintaining high-quality patient care. A key component of an enhanced recovery pathway is the ability to predictably reduce inpatient length of stay, as this is a critical component of the cost equation.PURPOSETo determine the efficacy of an enhanced recovery pathway on reducing length of stay after thoracolumbar adult deformity surgery.STUDY DESIGNSingle surgeon retrospective review of prospectively-collected data.PATIENT SAMPLEForty adult deformity patients who underwent ≥5 levels of fusion to the pelvis (two to L5) with a single surgeon before and after implementation of an ERAS pathway.METHODSThe pathway involved participation by anesthesiology, hospital medicine, and physical therapy, and was designed to achieve goals previously associated with decreased LOS (eg, EBL<1200 mL, procedure time <4.5 hours, avoidance of ICU postoperatively, and mobilization POD0-1). Patients were propensity-score matched 1:1 to a historical cohort (enhanced recovery ER] and historical H] cohorts), based on demographics, medical comorbidities, radiographic alignment parameters, and surgical factors. Outcomes were compared to determine the effect of the enhanced recovery pathway. Primary outcomes included LOS and 90-day complications and readmissions.RESULTSAfter matching, gender, BMI, ASA class, preoperative opioid dependence, day of surgery, sagittal alignment parameters, rate of revision surgery, three-column osteotomies, and interbody fusions were comparable between the cohorts (p>.05). In the ER cohort, there was reduced EBL (920±640 vs. 1437±555, p=.004) and no ER patient went to the ICU immediately following surgery, compared with 30% of H patients (p=.022). The ER cohort also had a greater number of patients ambulating by POD1 compared to the H cohort (100% vs. 55%, p=.010). ER patients had a shorter LOS (4.5±1.3 vs. 7.3±4.4 days, p=.010). A 90-day readmission and complications were comparable between the cohorts (p>.05).CONCLUSIONSThe creation of an ERAS pathway for patients undergoing thoracolumbar adult deformity surgery reduced length of stay without negatively affecting short-term morbidity and complications. Given the specificity of this pathway to a single surgeon and hospital, the resources and staffing changes that were instrumental in creating the pathway may not be generalizable to other centers.
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