Publication date: Available online 24 July 2018
Source: The Spine Journal
Author(s): Eryck Moskven, Étienne Bourassa-Moreau, Raphaele Charest-Morin, Alana Flexman, John Street
Abstract
Study Design: Systematic review.
Objectives: To identify currently used measures of frailty and sarcopenia in the adult spine surgery literature. To assess their ability to predict postoperative outcomes including mortality, morbidity, in-hospital length of stay (LOS) and discharge disposition. To determine which is the best clinical measure of frailty and sarcopenia in predicting outcome after spine surgery.
Summary of Background Data: Frailty and sarcopenia have been identified as predictors of mortality and adverse-events (AEs) in numerous non-surgical and non-spine populations. This topic is an emerging area of interest and study in patients undergoing spinal surgery.
Methods: A systematic literature review using the PRISMA methodology of MEDLINE, PubMed, Ovid, EMBASE, and Cochrane databases was performed from January 1950 to August 2017. Included studies consisted of those that examined measures of frailty or sarcopenia in adult patients undergoing any spinal surgery. The literature was synthesized and recommendations are proposed based on the GRADE system.
Results: The initial search yielded 210 results, 11 of which met our complete inclusion criteria. Seven reported on measures of frailty and four reported on measures of sarcopenia. Frailty, assessed using a variety of measurement tools, was a consistent predictor of mortality, major and minor morbidity, prolonged in-hospital LOS and discharge to a center of higher care for adult patients undergoing spinal surgery. The relationship between sarcopenia and postoperative outcomes was inconsistent due to the lack of consensus regarding the definition, measurement tools and wide variability in sarcopenia measured in the spinal population.
Conclusions: Frailty is predictive of AEs, mortality, in-hospital LOS and discharge disposition in a number of distinct spinal surgery populations. The impact of sarcopenia on postoperative outcomes is equivocal given the current state of the literature. The relationship between spinal pathology, frailty, sarcopenia and how they interact to yield outcome remains to be clarified. Frailty and sarcopenia are potentially useful tools for risk stratification of patients undergoing spinal surgery.
This systematic review was registered with PROSPERO, registration number 85096.
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