Enhanced recovery pathway in adult patients undergoing thoracolumbar deformity surgery. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • BACKGROUND CONTEXT: Enhanced 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. PURPOSE: To determine the efficacy of an enhanced recovery pathway on reducing length of stay after thoracolumbar adult deformity surgery. STUDY DESIGN: Single surgeon retrospective review of prospectively-collected data. PATIENT SAMPLE: Forty 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. METHODS: The 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. RESULTS: After 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). CONCLUSIONS: The 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.

publication date

  • January 9, 2021

Research

keywords

  • Enhanced Recovery After Surgery
  • Spinal Fusion

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85099610826

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1016/j.spinee.2021.01.003

PubMed ID

  • 33434650

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 21

issue

  • 5