Reduction in complication and revision rates for robotic-guided short-segment lumbar fusion surgery: results of a prospective, multi-center study

JI Liounakos, V Kumar, A Jamshidi, Z Silman… - Journal of robotic …, 2021 - Springer
JI Liounakos, V Kumar, A Jamshidi, Z Silman, CR Good, SR Schroerlucke, A Cannestra…
Journal of robotic surgery, 2021Springer
Studies evaluating robotic guidance in lumbar fusion are limited primarily to evaluation of
screw accuracy and perioperative complications. This is the first study to evaluate granular
differences in short and long-term complication and revision rate profiles between robotic
(RG) fluoroscopic (FG) guidance for minimally invasive short-segment lumbar fusions. A
retrospective analysis of a prospective, multi-center database was performed. Complications
were subdivided into surgical (further subcategorized into adjacent segment disease, new …
Abstract
Studies evaluating robotic guidance in lumbar fusion are limited primarily to evaluation of screw accuracy and perioperative complications. This is the first study to evaluate granular differences in short and long-term complication and revision rate profiles between robotic (RG) fluoroscopic (FG) guidance for minimally invasive short-segment lumbar fusions. A retrospective analysis of a prospective, multi-center database was performed. Complications were subdivided into surgical (further subcategorized into adjacent segment disease, new-onset back pain, radiculopathy, motor-deficit, hardware failure, pseudoarthrosis), wound, and medical complications. Complication and revision rates were compared between RG and FG groups cumulatively at 30, 90 days, and 1 year. 374 RG and 111 FG procedures were performed. RG was associated with an 86.25, 83.20, and 69.42% cumulative reduction in complication rate at 30, 90 days, and 1 year, respectively, compared to FG (p < 0.001). At all follow-up points, new-onset radiculopathy and medical complications were most prevalent in both groups. The greatest reductions in complication rates were seen for new-onset back pain (88.13%; p = 0.001) and wound complications (95.05%; p < 0.001) at 30 days, new-onset motor deficits (90.11%; p = 0.004) and wound complications (85.16%; p < 0.001) at 90 days, and new-onset motor deficits (85.16%; p = 0.002), wound (85.16%; p < 0.001), and medical complications (75.72%; p < 0.001) at 1 year. RG was associated with a 92.58% (p = 0.002) reduction in revision rate at 90 days and a 66.08% (p = 0.026) reduction at 1 year. RG was associated with significant reductions in postoperative complication rates at all follow-up time points and significant reductions in revision rates at 90 days and 1 year.
Springer
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果