4.6 Article

Complication rate of overlapping versus nonoverlapping functional and stereotactic surgery: a retrospective cohort study

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGERY
Volume 138, Issue 4, Pages 1043-1049

Publisher

AMER ASSOC NEUROLOGICAL SURGEONS
DOI: 10.3171/2022.8.JNS212363

Keywords

overlapping surgery; functional neurosurgery; concurrent; stereotactic; outcomes; complications

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The study found that there was no increased risk of 1-year complications or increased OR time for overlapping functional and stereotactic neurosurgical procedures compared with nonoverlapping procedures. Complications were predominantly infections in both cohorts, and there were no significant differences in overall complication rates between the two groups.
OBJECTIVE Overlapping surgery, in which one attending surgeon manages two overlapping operating rooms (ORs) and is present for all the critical portions of each procedure, is an important policy that improves healthcare access for patients and case volumes for surgeons and surgical trainees. Despite several studies demonstrating the safety and ef-ficacy of overlapping neurosurgical operations, the practice of overlapping surgery remains controversial. To date, there are no studies that have investigated long-term complication rates of overlapping functional and stereotactic neurosurgi-cal procedures. The primary objective of this study was to investigate the 1-year complication rates and OR times for nonoverlapping versus overlapping functional procedures. The secondary objective was to gain insight into what types of complications are the most prevalent and test for differences between groups. METHODS Seven hundred eighty-three functional neurosurgical cases were divided into two cohorts, nonoverlapping (n = 342) and overlapping (n = 441). The American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) scale score was used to compare the preoperative risk for both cohorts. A complication was defined as any surgically related reason that required readmis- sion, reoperation, or an unplanned emergency department or clinic visit that required intervention. Complications were subdivided into infectious and noninfectious. Chi-square tests, independent-samples t-tests, and uni-and multivariable logistic regressions were used to determine significance. RESULTS There were no significant differences in mean ASA scale score (2.7 +/- 0.6 for both groups, p = 0.997) or overall complication rates (8.8% nonoverlapping vs 9.8% overlapping, p = 0.641) between the two cohorts. Infections accounted for the highest percentage of complications in both cohorts (46.6% vs 41.8%, p = 0.686). There were no statistically significant differences between mean in-room OR time (187.5 +/- 141.7 minutes vs 197.1 +/- 153.0 minutes, p = 0.373) or mean open-to-close time (112.2 +/- 107.9 minutes vs 121.0 +/- 123.1 minutes, p = 0.300) between nonoverlapping and overlapping cases. CONCLUSIONS There was no increased risk of 1-year complications or increased OR time for overlapping functional and stereotactic neurosurgical procedures compared with nonoverlapping procedures.

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