年龄是小儿奇异畸形 I 型手术治疗中再次手术和并发症的预测因素。

IF 2.1 3区 医学 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Journal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics Pub Date : 2024-09-20 Print Date: 2024-12-01 DOI:10.3171/2024.7.PEDS247
Thomas Johnstone, Maria Isabel Barros Guinle, Laura M Prolo, Gerald A Grant
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的奇拉氏畸形 I 型(CM-I)是指小脑扁桃体疝入椎管。当出现症状时,建议进行手术减压。据报道,CM-I 再手术率从 3% 到 30% 不等。然而,首次手术治疗时患者的年龄与再次手术和术后并发症的可能性之间的关系仍不十分明确。因此,本研究旨在确定患者年龄是否与再次手术和并发症发生率有关:从 2007-2021 年 MarketScan 数据库中查询了 0-21 岁诊断为 CM-I 并接受过手术减压的患者。确定了患者的性别、首次手术时的年龄、合并症、术后 90 天并发症和再次手术。构建了 Bootstrap 增强二元分类器,以确定首次手术减压的最佳时机与全因 90 天术后并发症和再次手术的关系。建立了多变量逻辑回归模型,以评估年龄、性别和合并症与手术减压后再次手术和并发症可能性之间的关系:共有 2675 例患者被纳入术后 90 天并发症分析,其中 1157 例被纳入再次手术分析队列。共有 524 名患者(19.6%)在手术减压后 90 天内出现并发症,84 名患者(7.3%)再次手术。在多变量回归中,年龄增加是降低再次手术可能性(OR 0.94,95% CI 0.90-0.98;P < 0.01)和术后 90 天并发症可能性(OR 0.96,95% CI 0.94-0.98;P < 0.01)的独立预测因素。预测并发症和再次手术的最佳年龄界限是 4 岁。4岁及以上患者的再次手术率(5.5% vs 13.2%,P < 0.01)和术后90天并发症发生率(18.4% vs 27.7%;P < 0.01)均显著低于3岁及以下儿童:结论:在全国接受CM-I手术治疗的儿童患者队列中,3岁及以下患者再次手术和出现并发症的可能性明显增加。尽管面对进行性神经功能缺损,CM-I减压手术不应推迟,但作者的研究结果表明,在医疗条件可行的情况下,将手术推迟到3岁以后可能有助于减轻不良事件。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Age as a predictor of reoperations and complications in surgically managed pediatric Chiari malformation type I.

Objective: Chiari malformation type I (CM-I) is defined by the herniation of the cerebellar tonsils into the spinal canal. When symptomatic, surgical decompression is recommended. Reported CM-I reoperation rates have ranged from 3% to 30%. However, the relationship between patient age at first surgical intervention and the likelihood of reoperation and postoperative complications remains poorly characterized. Therefore, this study aimed to determine whether patient age was associated with reoperation and complication rates.

Methods: Patients 0-21 years old with a diagnosis of CM-I and surgical decompression were queried from the 2007-2021 MarketScan databases. Patient sex, age at time of first procedure, comorbidities, 90-day postoperative complications, and reoperations were identified. Bootstrap-augmented binary classifiers were constructed to determine the optimal timing of first surgical decompression with respect to all-cause 90-day postoperative complications and reoperation. Multivariate logistic regression models were built to assess the relationship between age, sex, and comorbidities and the likelihood of reoperation and complications following surgical decompression.

Results: A total of 2675 patients were included for analysis of 90-day postoperative complications, and 1157 were included in the reoperation analysis cohort. A total of 524 patients (19.6%) experienced a complication within 90 days of surgical decompression, and 84 patients (7.3%) had reoperations. On multivariate regression, increased age was an independent predictor of a reduced likelihood of both reoperations (OR 0.94, 95% CI 0.90-0.98; p < 0.01) and 90-day postoperative complications (OR 0.96, 95% CI 0.94-0.98; p < 0.01). The optimal age cutoff to predict both complications and reoperations was 4 years. For patients ages 4 years and older, both the reoperation rate (5.5% vs 13.2%, p < 0.01) and 90-day postoperative complication rates (18.4% vs 27.7%; p < 0.01) were significantly less than those for children 3 years and younger.

Conclusions: In a national cohort of pediatric patients undergoing surgically managed CM-I, there was a significantly increased likelihood of reoperation and complications in patients ages 3 years and younger. Although CM-I decompression should not be postponed in the face of progressive neurological deficits, the authors' findings suggest that delaying surgery until after the age of 3 years, when medically feasible, may help mitigate adverse events.

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来源期刊
Journal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics
Journal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
10.50%
发文量
307
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Information not localiced
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