4.1 Article

Frequency and predictors of concurrent complications in multi-suture release for syndromic craniosynostosis

Journal

CHILDS NERVOUS SYSTEM
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00381-023-06076-y

Keywords

Complication; Concurrent; Craniosynostosis; National Surgical Quality Improvement Program; Pediatric; Perioperative

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This study examined the concurrent complications and predictive factors in syndromic children after multi-suture craniosynostosis surgery. It found that cardiac and pulmonary risk factors, along with preoperative nutritional support, were independently associated with concurrent complications. This information can be used to guide presurgical counseling and risk assessment.
PurposeUnderstanding the complication profile of craniosynostosis surgery is important, yet little is known about complication co-occurrence in syndromic children after multi-suture craniosynostosis surgery. We examined concurrent perioperative complications and predictive factors in this population.MethodsIn this retrospective cohort study, children with syndromic diagnoses and multi-suture involvement who underwent craniosynostosis surgery in 2012-2020 were identified from the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program-Pediatric database. The primary outcome was concurrent complications; factors associated with concurrent complications were identified. Correlations between complications and patient outcomes were assessed.ResultsAmong 5,848 children identified, 161 children (2.75%) had concurrent complications: 129 (2.21%) experienced two complications and 32 (0.55%) experienced & GE; 3. The most frequent complication was bleeding/transfusion (69.53%). The most common concurrent complications were transfusion/superficial infection (27.95%) and transfusion/deep incisional infection (13.04%) or transfusion/sepsis (13.04%). Two cardiac factors (major cardiac risk factors (odds ratio (OR) 3.50 [1.92-6.38]) and previous cardiac surgery (OR 4.87 [2.36-10.04])), two pulmonary factors (preoperative ventilator dependence (OR 3.27 [1.16-9.21]) and structural pulmonary/airway abnormalities (OR 2.89 [2.05-4.08])), and preoperative nutritional support (OR 4.05 [2.34-7.01]) were independently associated with concurrent complications. Children who received blood transfusion had higher odds of deep surgical site infection (OR 4.62 [1.08-19.73]; p = 0.04).ConclusionsOur results indicate that several cardiac and pulmonary risk factors, along with preoperative nutritional support, were independently associated with concurrent complications but procedural factors were not. This information can help inform presurgical counseling and preoperative risk stratification in this population.

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