Study design: Retrospective review.
Objective: To assess the relationship between age and complications, and report age-stratified complication rates for the surgical treatment of adult scoliosis.
Summary of background data: Literature examining age and complication rates for adult scoliosis surgery is conflicting. The Scoliosis Research Society (SRS) morbidity and mortality (M&M) database contains a large series of adult scoliosis patients that can be utilized to investigate this relationship.
Methods: The SRS M&M database was queried from 2004 to 2007 to identify all cases of adult scoliosis. Data pertaining to patient age, complications, scoliosis, and surgery type were extracted from the database. Age-based analyses of clinical parameters were conducted using age as both a stratified categorical variable and as a continuous variable.
Results: In our cohort of 5470 adult scoliosis patients, the overall complication rate was 13.5% and there was a 0.3% mortality rate. Patients who experienced complications were significantly older than those without complications (55.9 ± 16.5 yrs vs. 51.2 ± 18.7 yrs, P < 0.001). When complications were stratified according to decade of age, there was also a statistically significant trend of increasing complication rates with each decade of life (P < 0.001). Dural tears were the most common complication in patients over 50 years, whereas implant-related complications were the most common in patients less than 50 years.
Conclusion: There was a clear association between increasing age and higher rates of major short-term complications, a factor that ought to be taken into account during treatment decision making and patient counseling.