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Effect of Drain Duration and Output on Perioperative Outcomes and Readmissions after Lumbar Spine Surgery

Brian Karamian, Parth Kothari, Gregory Toci, Mark James Lambrechts, Jose Canseco, Jennifer Mao, Raj Narayan, Samuel Alfonsi, Francis Sirch, Nadim Kheir, Nicholas Semenza, Barrett Woods, Jeffrey Rihn, Mark Kurd, Kris Radcliff, Ian David Kaye, Alan Hilibrand, Christopher Kepler, Alexander Richard Vaccaro, Gregory Schroeder

Asian spine journal(2023)

Cited 2|Views24
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Abstract
Study Design: Single-center retrospective cohort.Purpose: To compare surgical outcomes of patients based on lumbar drain variables relating to output and duration. Overview of Literature: The use of drains following lumbar spine surgery, specifically with respect to hospital readmission, postop erative hematoma, postoperative anemia, and surgical site infections, has been controversial.Methods: Patients aged >= 18 years who underwent lumbar fusion with a postoperative drain between 2017 and 2020 were included and grouped based on hospital readmission status, last 8-hour drain output (<40 ml. cutoff), or drain duration (2 days cutoff). Total out- put of all drains, total output of the primary drain, drain duration in days, drain output per day, last 8-hour output, penultimate 8-hour output, and last 8-hour delta (last 8-hour output subtracted by penultimate 8-hour output) were collected. Continuous and categorical data were compared between groups. Multivariate logistic regression analysis and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis were performed to determine whether drain variables can predict hospital readmission, postoperative blood transfusions, and postoperative anemia. Alpha was 0.05. Results: Our cohort consisted of 1,166 patients with 111 (9.5%) hospital readmissions. Results of regression analysis did not identify any of the drain variables as independent predictors of hospital readmission, postoperative blood transfusion, or postoperative ane mia. ROC analysis demonstrated the drain variables to be poor predictors of hospital readmission, with the highest area under curveof 0.524 (drain duration), corresponding to a sensitivity of 61.3% and specificity of 49.9% Conclusions: Drain output or duration did not affect readmission rates following lumbar spine surgery.
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Key words
Surgical drain,Hematoma,Reoperation,Patient readmissions,Complications
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